




For further information about Jesmond Dene or the Rosebery Hotel please don't hesitate to conatct us.
To check availability or to book please CALL (+44) 0191 281 3363
Possibly Newcastle's best loved park, Jesmond Dene is an oasis of natural tranquility in a busy city. You can walk along wooded pathways down to the banks of the stream that runs through the Dene. Within the park confines, there are bowling greens, a pe’ts corner and kids swings. Every Sunday morning an arts and craft fair is held on Armstrong Bridge at the entrance to the Dene.
Jesmond Dene is a unique resource for the people of Newcastle. It is a narrow wooded valley that follows the river Ouseburn between South Gosforth and Jesmond Vale. This provides an important wildlife corridor right into the centre of Newcastle. There is a spectacular mix of native and exotic trees, and the Dene is home to a lot of wildlife, notably the Kingfisher, the Red Squirrel and many woodland birds. The Dene stretches for over three kilometres and has many areas of tranquillity, as well as ‘honey pots’ of activity.
Jesmond Dene provides strong historical links with 19th Century industrial development and landscape design – Lord Armstrong’ s influence being very apparent. There is also a large network of paths and bridges throughout.
Near the entrance of Jesmond Dene, just off the Coast
Road is Millfield House. This provides a range of activities
including a Ranger Service Information Room, Conference
Centre, café and toilets. This part of the Dene also
has a large picnic area and a ‘Pet’s Corner’.
Limited parking is available but alternatively there are
good public transport links, many buses stopping at the
Cradlewell on the Coast Road (A1058).
Other facilities in Jesmond Dene include Paddy Freemans
boating lake, which also has a play area, toilets and a
café open on a weekend and holidays. The area can
be reached along Freeman Road.
Although there is an industrial history to the Dene, much
of what you see in Jesmond Dene today is a result of Sir
William George Armstrong (1st Baron Armstrong of Cragside).
In 1835, Armstrong had Jesmond Dean (no longer in existence)
built in preparation for his marriage. As his wealth
increased he acquired chunks of the adjacent valley.
By 1862, Armstrong had acquired most of the present Jesmond
Dene,
the land stretching from Jesmond Dene House in the North
to Benton Bridge in the South. At this time he built
the banqueting hall (now a controlled ruin) to cater for
the increasing numbers of business clients he was entertaining.
Armstrong enclosed the land and transformed the semi-industrial
and wooded valley into his garden, including attractions
such as a waterfall and a grotto, as well as planting many
exotic species of trees and shrubs.
By the 1870s Armstrong was spending much of his time at Cragside, his home in Northumberland. In 1878, shortly after its opening Armstrong donated Armstrong Bridge to the townspeople of Newcastle. Two years later he donated Armstrong Park (the area south of Armstrong bridge to Heaton Park). In 1883, Armstrong presented 'Jesmond Dean' to the Mayor, Aldermen and Citizens of Newcastle upon Tyne, as a Public Park to be maintained for all time as an oasis of natural beauty within an urban setting. The Prince and Princess of Wales officially opened Jesmond Dene to the public in 1884. Following the death of Lady Nobel at Jesmond Dene House in 1931, the Dene was extended northwards as far as Castle Farm Bridge. There was further extension in the 1970s when Newcastle City Council purchased land from Castle Farm Bridge to South Gosforth, at which time a pedestrian tunnel through the bridge was unblocked.
Jesmond Dene is situated close to the A1058 coast road
and within a 1 minute walk from the hotel
Cost: Free





