In the mid-16th century,
Richmond Palace was a favourite residence of Queen
Elizabeth I and in 1574 she granted "Our park of Isleworth otherwise called the Newe Parke of Richmonde" to
Edward Bacon. This statement was made even though Isleworth parish and manor lay on the
Middlesex bank opposite the
Surrey bank of Richmond — the
Abbey of Syon in Isleworth was tied to that
of Sheen on the other respective bank, which had jointly for centuries owned the estate. Queen Elizabeth died at Richmond in 1603. Later that year her successor, King
James I of England, established a hunting park by adding monastic land to the existing park and creating an enlarged area of . This then became known as The New Park of Richmond. The present name "Old Deer Park" was adopted after 1637 when James's son King
Charles I established the much larger
Richmond Park on the other side of the town. During the eighteenth century
Richmond Lodge was located in the Park, which served as the summer home of
George, Prince of Wales (the future George II) and his wife
Princess Caroline following their dispute with his father
George I. The majority of the park is now occupied by the
Royal Mid-Surrey Golf Club, and this has been so since 1892. Within the club's boundaries are two 18-hole courses, plus a separate area within which lies the Grade I
listed King's Observatory, established by King
George III in 1769. To the south-west of the Observatory, under the fairway of the 14th hole of the outer golf course, lie the foundations of the former Carthusian
Sheen Priory, founded by
Henry V in 1414. Construction of the railway line westwards from
Richmond Station in 1847/8 restricted the access from
Richmond Green to Old Deer Park, except for one narrow bridge. Eighty-five years later a new arterial road (the
"Great Chertsey Road"), complete with a high ramped approach to a new bridge over the Thames (
Twickenham Bridge – built in 1933), was also constructed across the southern end of the park, close to and roughly parallel with the railway. This heightened the sense of separation between town and park – alleviating this problem is also part of the new strategy. The park was used to accommodate 5,000 of the 8,000
Scouts attending the
1st World Scout Jamboree in 1920. The public open spaces are occasionally used for
circuses,
funfairs and other events. ==Cricket ground==