The park has a number of entrances, one on Etruria Road, one on Dundee Road and two on Etruria Vale Road.
The coordinates given are for the entrance to the park located at the end of Dundee Road at the junction with Etruria Vale Road.
"Etruria Park was laid out in Etruria Valley at the start of the 20th century opposite Josiah Wedgwood's Etruria pottery works and Earl Granville Shelton iron works. Now neither the pottery or iron works remain."
A walk through the small park reveals flower beds and trees, a basketball court, children's playground. football pitch and a cycling speedway track.
At the Etruria Road entrance there is a plaque erected in 1953 to commemorate Thomas Wedgwood's photographic achievements. (
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There are a number of paths that criss cross the park at the centre of which is a fountain (1904) presented by the Shirley brothers of the Etruscan Bone and Flint Mill. (
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History of the park.
"With the disappearance of the Etruria Grove and, later, the final decay of all vegetation in Etruria, it was decided to open a park there! On Thursday, September 29th, 1904, the opening ceremony was performed and the Etruscans at last had their own park, although a dozen years had elapsed since the Corporation of Hanley had purchased the land - eleven acres - at a cost of four thousand seven hundred and nineteen pounds, seventeen shillings and sevenpence.
Mr. Robert Thompson, F.R.H.S., Parks Superintendent, put much good work into the park, covering it with springy turf, young trees and shrubs. A carriage drive was made from the main gates and the park now possesses a good bowling green and tennis courts..........
To the several thousands attending the opening ceremony in delightful weather, all was new and beautiful. Alderman Shirley presented the Mayor with a silver-gilt key, with which he opened the gates, while the Mayoress turned on the fountain and drank to the success of the new Park." Source: History of Etruria" E J D Warrillow
The 11-acre park was built next to St. Matthews church on a triangle of land between Lord Street, Etruria Vale Road and the Trent and Mersey Canal.
Lord Street (Now Etruria Road) is a main road from Burslem and Hanley to Newcastle under Lyme. A number of streets of terraced houses laid out below the parks are named after South African towns prominent in the South African Wars (1899-1902), also known as the Boer Wars, a conflict in southern Africa between the British Empire and the allied, Afrikaner-populated Transvaal (or South African Republic) and Orange Free State (modern Free State), in what is now South Africa." Source: (
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