'Hampstead Heath' (locally known as "The Heath") is a public open space in the north of
London.

Kenwood House
Hampstead Heath covers 3.2 km² (320
ha; 791
acres). It has 25 main ponds and areas of ancient woodland, bog, hedgerows, and grassland. A part of the Heath has been designated as a
Site of Special Scientific Interest by
English Nature, the smallest one in London.

Highgate model boating pond near Parliament Hill
Part of the land was originally the common lands of the Manor of
Hampstead, while much of the rest was the parkland and farmland of
Kenwood House.
Most of it is managed by the
Corporation of London. The Kenwood area, 0.5 km² (50 ha; 112 acres), is maintained by
English Heritage. Most of the Heath, 2.8 km² (280 ha; 681 acres), lies in the
London Borough of Camden. The remaining 0.4 km² (40 ha; 110 acres) is the
Hampstead Heath Extension lying in the
London Borough of Barnet. The Heath is policed by its own small police force, the
Hampstead Heath Constabulary.
Hampstead Heath was featured on the television programme ''
Seven Natural Wonders'' as one of the wonders of the London area, with a focus on
Parliament Hill. The episode was presented by
Bill Oddie, who lives nearby and
watches birds there regularly.
Public transport near the Heath include National Rail and the London Underground, with National Rail stations at
Gospel Oak and
Hampstead Heath and London Underground "Tube" stations at
Hampstead and
Belsize Park to the west,
Golders Green to the north, and
Highgate and
Archway to the east. Bus routes surround most of the heath.
There are no signposts to, or on, Hampstead Heath. Tourist handbooks usually advise visitors to bring a map with them. At the southern tip of the park is the Lido open air swimming pool. Farther north, near the Highgate side, are
two ponds in which swimming is allowed, both single-sex (that is, one is for males only, while the other one is for females only). To the west of these is the 'mixed pond', where members of either sex (male or female) may swim. These ponds are fed by the
Fleet River, which starts on the Heath and flows down to the River Thames at Blackfriars. Other ponds are variously used for fishing, model boats, and reserved for wildlife.
The wildlife includes kingfishers, jackdaws and ring-necked parakeets. Pipistrelles and Daubenton's bats may be seen over the ponds.
Part of the area (the West Heath) has long been well-known for its use by
gay men as a cruising ground at night. There have been incidental attacks carried out on people cruising, and indecency prosecutions, perhaps the most famous being ''R v Thompson'' (1918), 13 Cr App R 80, known to law students throughout the
common law world for its description of the accused "carrying powder puffs" deemed sufficiently inculpating to be admissible in evidence under the similar facts rule. Adjoining the West Heath, not part of Hampstead Heath proper but still run by the Corporation of London, is
Golders Hill Park.

''The Writer''
In 2005,
Giancarlo Neri's
sculpture ''The Writer'', a 9-metre tall table and chair, was exhibited on Hampstead Heath.
John Atkinson Grimshaw, Victorian era painter, painted an elaborate night-time scene of Hampstead Hill in oils. Hampstead Heath also provided the backdrop for the opening scene in
Victorian writer
Wilkie Collins' novel ''
The Woman in White''.
Parliament Hill, one of the highest points in London, offers great views over the city.
From 1808 to 1814 Hampstead Heath hosted a station in the
shutter telegraph chain which connected the Admiralty in
London to its naval ships in the port of
Great Yarmouth.
Whilst living in London
Karl Marx and his family would take regular Sunday picnics on the heath.
Another point of interest which harkens back to the pre-Roman era is the curious fenced off circular parcel called Boudicca's Mound. Centred between the Men's Pond and the Mixed Bathing Pond and north of Parliament Hill, the site is believed to be where Queen
Boudicca (Boadicea) was buried after she and 10,000 other British soldiers were defeated at Battle Bridge. Most Hampstead Heath goers bypass the site without giving it a second thought. There are however, other theories as to where she lies (King's Cross Station). There is also a statue of her driving a reinless chariot at Westminster Bridge near the
Palace of Westminster.
Sadly recent research suggests that 'Boudicca's Mound' is a tumulus upon which a 17th Century windmill sat - earlier drawings and paintings of the area show no mound whatsoever, and excavations have discovered nothing but earth.
External links
★
Hampstead Heath, Corporation of London website
★
History of Hampstead Heath
★
The Heath & Hampstead Society