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Ranelagh Gardens (; alternative spellings include Ranelegh and Ranleigh, the latter reflecting the English pronunciation) were public located in Chelsea, then just outside , England, in the 18th century.


History
The Ranelagh Gardens were so called because they occupied the site of Ranelagh House, built in 1688–89 by The 1st Earl of Ranelagh, an Anglo-Irish peer who was the Treasurer of (1685–1702), immediately adjoining the hospital; according to Bowack's Antiquities of Middlesex (1705), it was "Designed and built by himself". Ranelagh House was demolished in 1805 (Colvin 1995, p. 561). The original Ranelagh () was one of the Earl's Irish estates: a similar pleasure garden was opened near , and this gives its name to the present-day suburb of .

In 1741, the house and grounds were purchased by a syndicate led by the proprietor of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and Sir Thomas Robinson MP, and the gardens opened to the public the following year. Ranelagh was considered more fashionable than its older rival ; the entrance charge was two and sixpence, compared to a shilling at Vauxhall. wrote soon after the gardens opened, "It has totally beat Vauxhall... You can't set your foot without treading on a Prince, or Duke of Cumberland." Ranelagh Gardens introduced the , formerly a private, aristocratic entertainment, to a wider, middle-class English public, where it was open to commentary by essayists and writers of moral fiction.Terry Castle, Masquerade and Civilization: The Carnivalesque in Eighteenth-Century English Culture and Fiction (Stanford University Press), 1986.

The centrepiece of Ranelagh was a rotunda, which figured prominently in views of Ranelagh Gardens taken from the river. It had a diameter of 120 feet (37 metres) and was designed by William Jones, a surveyor to the East India Company. The central support housed a chimney and fireplaces for use in winter. From its opening, the Rotunda at Ranelagh Gardens was an important venue for musical concerts. In 1765, the nine-year-old performed in this showplace. painted the gardens, and painted the interior of the Rotunda twice, for different patrons.A 1751 Canaletto view of Ranelagh Gardens, extending down to the river bank between Chelsea Hospital and Ranelagh House, was illustrated in The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 40 No. 226 (January 1922), p. 37, fig. B (at Cotswold Gallery, London). The rotunda was closed in 1803 and demolished two years later. The organ was moved to All Saints Church, Evesham. History for 1746 Byfield (Harris & Byfield?), The Rotunda, Chelsea, The National Pipe Organ Register, UK, 2008.

There was also a Chinese pavilion, which was added in 1750, an ornamental lake and several walks. Ranelagh was a popular venue for romantic assignations. wrote that it was, "the most convenient place for courtships of every kind — the best market we have in England."

Such was the renown of the gardens and the vogue for music in the open air (the eight year-old played a charity performance there on 29 June 1764) that a New York Ranelagh Gardens was opened in New York, in the former Rutgers house,V. L. Redway, "Handel in Colonial and Post-Colonial America (To 1820)", The Musical Quarterly 1935; Caldwell, Mark (2005). New York Night: The Mystique and Its History (New York: Scribner's), p. 44. as a rival to the New York Vauxhall Gardens; its proprietor John Kenzie posted an advertisement for it during the occupation of the city in the American Revolution, in hopes of attracting the British soldiers, as well as "the Respectable Public",Advertisement quoted in Michael Batterberry and Ariane Batterberry, On the Town in New York, 1999, p. 2. and a Jardin du Ranelagh was created in Paris' fashionable 16th arrondissement in 1870.

Ranelagh Gardens were redesigned by John Gibson in the 19th century. It is now a green with shaded walks, part of the grounds of and the site of the annual Chelsea Flower Show.


See also
  • Cremorne Gardens – a mid-19th-century public garden. Also in Chelsea, but at the opposite end of the district.
  • – a Dublin suburb in which was once located pleasure gardens similar to those in Ranelagh Gardens, London.
  • Chelsea Bridge Road – next to Ranelagh Gardens
  • Ranelagh Paris


Notes
  • Colvin, Howard. A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600–1840, 3rd edition, 1995.
  • Melanie Doderer-Winkler, Magnificent Entertainments: Temporary Architecture for Georgian Festivals (London and New Haven: Yale University Press for The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, December 2013). and .
  • Weintraub, Stanley. Disraeli: A Biography, New York: Truman Talley Books, 1994.


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