Hanging Wood was a former woodland area located in what is now southeast London, which covered a geographical area between Woolwich Common and Charlton. Hanging Wood was a hideout for highwaymen who operated on Shooter's Hill and Blackheath. Parts of the Hanging Wood are preserved as Maryon Park, Maryon Wilson Park and Gilbert's Pit in the Royal Borough of Greenwich.[1]

Hanging Wood (1920), today Maryon Wilson Park

Though it is popularly supposed that the wood was used for hanging those highwaymen who were caught, a more likely explanation for the name is the wood's location on steep slopes so that the trees appear to hang from the slope. Such woods are often referred to as 'hanging woods'[2] (the word 'hang' comes from the Old English 'hangra', a wooded slope).[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Map of Charlton, 1746 | Historic Maps of Greenwich | Ideal Homes". ideal-homes.org.uk. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
  2. ^ "Hanging Wood". A-Z of Tree Terms. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  3. ^ Fowler, Christopher. "Five hidden London spaces". Christopher Fowler. Retrieved 17 September 2019.

51°29′20″N 0°02′35″E / 51.489°N 0.043°E / 51.489; 0.043