Victoria Park Victoria Park is an open space beside the Mersey, with a modern sports stadium and a skateboard park. It contains a large Georgian manor house, previously the Old Warps maternity hospital, subsequently converted into flats. Nearby is a narrow Victorian suspension bridge, Howley Bridge, which provides pedestrian access between Howley and Latchford. Victoria Park is on the site of the Old Warps Estate. In 1897 the local council bought the estate from the owners and converted it into a park to provide an amenity for the local working-class people of the terraced housing of industrial Latchford. To mark the Diamond Jubilee of
Queen Victoria the park was named "Victoria Park". The Georgian manor house "Old Warps" still stands and has been converted to a restaurant. Before work on the Mersey commenced, Victoria Park was under the
River Mersey, in an area that was considered dangerous by even the most experienced seamen. In 1724 various new
weirs were built along the course of the River Mersey due to its often treacherous nature. The course of the Mersey was then altered and the land was converted into the Old Warps Estate. A weir was built and is still monitored 24 hours a day by a "weir man" from a wooden building situated about the weir, which is the tidal limit of the Mersey. The Mersey is so improved now that salmon and trout are often seen, as are herons, kingfishers and cormorants, especially in the wide pool on the river bend below the weir. Access to
Howley is provided by a
suspension bridge for pedestrians, recently renovated by Warrington Borough Council. Victoria Park has a large
running track which is the home of Warrington Athletic Club, and has
bowling greens, a
skate-park and various other leisure facilities. A 5 km run against the clock is organised by the group
Parkrun most Saturday mornings. Old Manor Lock marks the northern end of the park. Victoria Park has also been used for the past 2 years for a new festival called
Neighbourhood Weekender, which is an extended, larger version of the Neighbourhood inner-city festival in Manchester, and has taken place on May bank holiday, in 2018 and 2019.
Black Bear Park Black Bear Canal, now infilled and used as
Black Bear Park, once ran from docks on the Manchester Ship Canal near Wilderspool Causeway (to the west of Latchford) to the Mersey at Manor Lock in Howley, providing a shortcut for shipping, avoiding a large river bend and weir. In 1804, an eight-mile long canal was built between Latchford and
Runcorn. It was named the Old Quay Canal. Once the
Manchester Ship Canal was dug, in the 1890s, it was shortened to one mile, from
Stockton Heath to the
River Mersey, at Manor Lock. It was renamed the Black Bear Canal. The Black Bear Canal remained in use for the transport of South American hides to tanneries, until the 1960s, when it fell into disuse.
Warrington Borough Council bought the land. After a local boy drowned in the late 1960s, it was converted in 1981 into a parkland forming a line from
Victoria Park and the banks of the
River Mersey, through to
Stockton Heath. The park also forms a part of the
Trans Pennine Trail. ==References==