LewishamNews

Conservation charity campaigns to bring 100-year-old derelict scout hut back into action

The now derelict prefab sits on privately owned land by a section of railway in Crofton Park that once formed part of the Great North Wood.  

The Site And Plans For The Site By Nicholas MacGuinness

The site was used by scouts for nearly 100 years but the hut has been left in disrepair since the land owner bought it and the scouts had to leave.  

The land was covered in debris before the council served the developer with a S215 notice to clean it up in December.  

At the time, when announcing the plan to serve the notice, the cabinet member for housing and planning, Cllr Paul Bell, said he was “fed-up of developers and owners of land taking from the local community”.  

The developer did tidy the front of the site but some waste remains to the rear, while the gate is not secure.    

It was the third S215 notice the council has issued to the developer.   

The first was served in 2018 when building waste was dumped on the site after the scout hut and land was designated an Asset of Community Value by Lewisham Council.   

The current site – Photo taken in 2021 by Julia Cody

Conservation charity the Fourth Reserve was formed in 2017 to “safeguard the natural heritage of south east London’s New Cross to Forest Hill cutting” and in particular to protect this vulnerable area from damaging development.   

The first scout hut built on the site is believed to have been lost to World War 2, while the current prefab was built in the mid-1960s and used by the scouts up until about 2004.  

The charity is raising funds that would go to having the prefab restored. 

According to the charity’s petition: “In 1922, to thank the scouts who patrolled the railway bridges in World War 1, the community raised funds to build the scouts a hut on the Courtrai Road cutting as it had been the camping ground for local scouts since around 1910.    

“The mayors of Lewisham and Deptford as well as MP Sir Philip Dawson declared the Courtrai woodland a park and it was formally opened in June 1922.  

“The Fourth Reserve feel that in a time of climate emergency where many children do not have access to their own garden and where trees and wildlife are more important than ever before, the Dandy Fifth Park should be restored as an outdoor education resource.”  

This depicts the Brockley 5th Troop 1915. This is the troop that the site was named after in 1922 when it was opened as the Dandy Fifth Park. They were known as the Dandy Fifths because of their very smart uniform. The photo was provided by the Croft.

The charity, which runs the Buckthorne Cutting Nature Reserve at Eddystone Road, would like to meet with the developer to make its case for a green community space and to highlight how the pandemic and climate emergency have “increased the community need to protect places like this against development”.

The hope is to secure a lease arrangement that would allow the Fourth Reserve to manage the woodland and to restore the prefab so that the 3rd Crofton Scouts can use it again, as well as vulnerable groups such as children with autism who can find open public parks challenging.  

Lewisham Council spokesperson said: “The council has taken enforcement action against the owners to clear waste from the site and has encouraged them to meet with local residents and campaigners to discuss their plans for the site. 

“We are keen to see this land used in a way which will provide benefit to the local community.” 

Top image is a photo of scouts camping on the site in 1914 when they patrolled the railway bridge located here as part of the war effort. The photo is from Lewisham Archives and was coloured by Paul Harrison.

 To donate go here: localgiving.org/appeal/dandyfifthpark/

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