Originally part of the
Royal Forest of
Kingswood, the area around Mayfield Park started to be cleared for agriculture from the 13th century. By 1839, the area was part of the
Parish of
Stapleton and was known as the 'Crooked Lane Inclosures' where the park is today and the 'Reeves Ground' where the houses were later built. In the 1880s, the Provincial Land Company let land in allotments for building purposes, and a large number of semi-detached villas and other houses were built and the area became known as Mayfield Park. Until the Hillfields
Housing estate was built in the 1920s, Mayfield Park encompassed an area which extended across
Lodge Causeway to the north-east. In 1934 a
Roman coin dating from the time of
Vespasian, Roman Emperor between 69-79 AD, was found in a neighbours garden in Mayfield Park South, but no other Roman evidence has been found. ==The playing fields and nature park==