Barnes is a district inside the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. It is in the north east of the borough and is positioned 5.8 miles west south west of Charing Cross.
Barnes has numerous 1700s and nineteenth century buildings in the streets close to Barnes Pond, which make up Barnes Village conservation area where a lot of the mid-19th century buildings are placed. Around the east riverside, there's the WWT London Wetland Centre which adjoins numerous fields for 3 principal national team sports.
The town was previously a part of Surrey, and it appears within the Domesday book as ‘Berne’. Barnes’ village church was built in between 1100 and 1150 and named the Chapel of St Mary’s. It was extended during the early thirteenth century, and was added to once more in 1786. A large fire destroyed components of the extensions to the chapel in 1978, so restoration work was accomplished in 1984.
Barnes features a great deal of sporting history spanning decades. In football, a High Master of St Paul’s School, Richard Mulcaster, is recognised with turning mob football into a refereed team sport. The school sits on Lonsdale Road, but at the time of Mulcaster it was situated in St Paul’s Cathedral. The town features a non-league football team referred to as Stonewall FC, who play at Barn Elms Playing Fields.
Barnes Rugby Club is known to be the oldest club in the world in any football code. They play next to the WWT London Wetlands Centre. The town is also identified for rowing; the loop of the Thames surrounding Barnes is part of the Championship Course utilised for the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race.