New online exhibition from unseen archives showcases Bushy Park’s role in D-Day

By Oliver Monk 21st May 2024

Some of the brick buildings of Camp Griffss, a US military base that sprang up in Bushy Park during the Second World War. (Photo: The Royal Parks)
Some of the brick buildings of Camp Griffss, a US military base that sprang up in Bushy Park during the Second World War. (Photo: The Royal Parks)

The Royal Parks charity has unveiled a new digital exhibition featuring previously-unseen photography alongside archive material, to explore the role Bushy Park played in planning D-Day, which marked the invasion of north-west Europe by allied forces during the Second World War.

The exhibition was created to coincide with the 80th anniversary of D-Day on 6 June 2024.

Despite little evidence of this history remaining in the park today, D-Day was plotted from March to June 1944 inside the huge military site based inside Bushy Park, known as Camp Griffiss.

The Royal Parks is inviting everyone visiting Bushy Park to discover and explore this history which took place in the same locations that visitors wander through today.

At its largest, Camp Griffiss housed more than 3,000 service personnel who suddenly found themselves in the middle of one of London's Royal Parks. 

Stories reveal what life was like inside the boundaries of the camp as well as the locals who welcomed them.

An aerial view of Camp Griffiss, the sprawling military base in Bushy Park. (Photo: The Royal Parks)

Roger, who lived near Bushy Park as a child during the Second World War, remembered the arrival of the American women who "really liked our cute little accents and they would give us huge quantities of sweets and big tins of fruit and jam, all sorts of things."

However, the reality of war was soon felt. Susan, an Auxiliary Territorial Service servicewoman remembers the constant fear of bomb raids while stationed at the park. 

"Quite often at night the sirens would go and we would hear the 'buzz bombs' overhead – we dived under our beds and grabbed our tin helmets," she said.

Four Auxiliary Territorial Service women based in Bushy Park. (Photo: The Royal Parks)

The exhibition comprises new interpretation on-site alongside a digital exhibition on The Royal Parks website, and a podcast which includes interviews with historical experts, the park staff, and the Friends of Bushy and Home Parks.

Bill Swan, Assistant Park Manager at Bushy Park, said: "We're pleased to launch this exhibition, which offers people a new opportunity to enjoy and experience the remarkable heritage of the park in person, as well as virtually.

"Bushy Park has a rich history which may not be obvious when walking around the park today and it is right to bring these historic stories about the locals who lived in and around the park, those on site in the camp and the planning by American military chiefs into the present for everyone to explore."

The exhibition can be explored on The Royal Parks' website here.

     

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