Leigh Park existed before becoming a Post-Second World War housing estate.
Early history As early as 1750, there have been mentions made of a farm on the site in a will of that year and local historians consider it likely that a farm existed there around 100 years earlier.
Leigh Park Estate The stables, walled garden and coach house of the house survived as part of
Staunton Country Park. The estate encompassed decorative planting, lakes and follies and was described as "one of the most beautiful spots in the county" in 1826. In 'The Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales' Leigh is described as a
tything of Havant parish two miles to the north west of Havant with a population of 547.
Second world war Leigh Park was re-developed as a new suburb for those made
homeless in
Portsmouth by bomb damage which occurred during
World War II and to enable the new roads and parks of Portsmouth to be built.
Post war The land for the estate was purchased by Portsmouth
City council from the
Fitzwygram family in 1944; work started on building in 1947 and the first residents moved in during 1949. The first shops opened in 1952 (in Stone Square) and the main shopping centre of Park
Parade / Greywell Shopping opened in 1955. The majority of homes in Leigh Park were built by Portsmouth City Council, not
Havant Borough Council through a financially underwritten cooperation with the former Havant and Waterloo Urban District Council. Most Leigh Park
tenants of
social housing pay rent to the properties' owners
Guinness Partnership (formerly Hermitage Housing) or Portsmouth City Council which has an office near Park Parade. Residents are liable in
council tax to Havant Borough Council who provide local services and collect the Hampshire County Council proportion. Construction of the estate was not fully completed until the early 1970s, although most of the houses in the area were built by 1960.
Barratt Homes is currently building on the former
Procter & Gamble site in the centre of Leigh Park. Leigh Park was one of the largest wholly council estates in
Europe however following the ongoing
right to buy many of the properties are privately owned. In 2004, Leigh Park made the news when a gang stole more than £100,000 from the
Nationwide Building Society and a man sleeping on a bench was set on fire, in a separate incident. ==Governance==