Uncoloured postcard of flower beds in Bishop's Park, Fulham. Ink: Dear Elsie, I shall be crossing Friday night, I shall come to see you Saturday afternoon, I shall not be able to see them at Weymouth this time I shall explain it all when I see you Love to all from Hughie & Emily [address in Guernsey supplied]. Bishop's Park was opened in 1893, consisting of land in the precincts and vicinity of All Saints' Church, Fulham.. The area had formerly been known as Bishop's Meadow, but had become derelict dumping ground, and the Bishop made it a condition of the donation that an embankment be built on the Thames; the District Board of Works, unable to finance the project, transferred the site to the London County Council, which built the embankment in 1889-93, The park was laid out by J. P. Norrington, the Vestry Surveyor. Fruther areas were added to the park over the following decade. The park was restored with aid from the Heritage Lottery Fund in 2011