It is most appropriate that Duck Island Cottage has been bestowed upon the London Historic Parks and Gardens Trust - a society concerned with the protection and enhancement of St James's Park.
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St.James's Park is London's oldest Royal Park, and the most visited. It's the famous setting for many royal ceremonies, from the daily Changing the Guard outside Buckingham Palace, to the full pageantry of Trooping the Colour on Horse Guards Parade in early June.
The park has a small lake, St James's Park Lake, with two islands, West Island and Duck Island, the latter named for the lake's collection of waterfowl.
Shortly after Parks acquired this site on September 13, 1897, the low, marshy land was graded with soil and ash and transformed into a public park. The state legislature named it for the St. James Episcopal Church, located just south of the park on Jerome Avenue at 190th Street.
The stadium has an asymmetrical appearance from the air and from some angles from ground level, due to the discrepancy in height between the sides and ends of the ground.
So in summer 1938 it was decided to build 'a swimming bath and squash court on the north side of the Palace in one of Nash's conservatories. ' In 1938, architect James Jack Roberts drew up plans for Buckingham Palace's north-west pavilion to be converted into a pool, and by spring 1939, the pool was completed.
James's Palace is the official residence of the sovereign, no monarch lives in St. James's Palace today. However, it is still used as a ceremonial meeting place for the Accession Council, and is the residence of minor members of the royal family, like Princesses Beatrice and Eugene of York and Princess Alexandra.
Currently, Clarence House is the London residence of King Charles III and his wife, Queen Camilla. They will continue to use Clarence House as their London home until at least 2027 while renovations to Buckingham Palace are ongoing.
A Royal Park, it is at the southernmost end of the St James's area, which was named after a once isolated medieval hospital dedicated to St James the Less, now the site of St James's Palace. The area was initially enclosed for a deer park near the Palace of Whitehall for King Henry VIII in the 1530's.