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Brunton Park
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Does anyone out there know how Carlisle United's ground got the name Brunton Park?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The 1899 OS map of the area shows that
(a) there was a football ground on the site well before Carlisle United moved in ; and
(b) the name 'Brunton Place' was attached to a nearby group of houses:
http:// www.upl .co/upl oads/18 99Map15 4064819 7.jpg
Going back to the 1863 OS map shows Brunton Place stood on its own, as a small hamlet:
http:// www.upl .co/upl oads/18 63Map15 4064825 9.jpg
The Oxford Names Companion gives the origin of the name 'Brunton' as meaning 'a farmstead by a small stream'.
So it seems that there was originally just a farm to the south-east of the ground's current location, which developed into the hamlet known as Brunton Place. The football ground later took its name from the neighbouring hamlet.
(a) there was a football ground on the site well before Carlisle United moved in ; and
(b) the name 'Brunton Place' was attached to a nearby group of houses:
http://
Going back to the 1863 OS map shows Brunton Place stood on its own, as a small hamlet:
http://
The Oxford Names Companion gives the origin of the name 'Brunton' as meaning 'a farmstead by a small stream'.
So it seems that there was originally just a farm to the south-east of the ground's current location, which developed into the hamlet known as Brunton Place. The football ground later took its name from the neighbouring hamlet.
Thanks for your reply.
It occurs to me that there might have been an intermediate step in the history I attempted to outline. There could have been a local landowner called Brunton (who had an ancestor who'd lived in a farmstead by a small stream, thus giving him that surname), who built a row of houses to accommodate the workers on his estate, with that row of houses becoming known as 'Brunton Place'.
So it's possible that a 'Mr Brunton' might have been involved in the chain of events but it seems certain that he didn't directly give his name to the football ground.
It occurs to me that there might have been an intermediate step in the history I attempted to outline. There could have been a local landowner called Brunton (who had an ancestor who'd lived in a farmstead by a small stream, thus giving him that surname), who built a row of houses to accommodate the workers on his estate, with that row of houses becoming known as 'Brunton Place'.
So it's possible that a 'Mr Brunton' might have been involved in the chain of events but it seems certain that he didn't directly give his name to the football ground.
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