| ALBERTMEMORIAL | Monument in Kensington Gardens, London (6,8) |
| CALAIS | French town whose burgers may be found in Victoria Tower Gardens, London (6) |
| KEW | ___ Gardens (London attraction) |
| WINDSOR | ___ Gardens, London home of Paddington Bear? (7) |
| PETERPAN | "Eternal boy" from Neverland in a play and novels by J. M. Barrie and immortalised in a bronze in Kensington Gardens (5,3) |
| RACKHAM | One of 12 siblings who became a skilful artist celebrated for his illustrations in classic children's books, including Grimm's Fairy Tales, Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens and The Wind in the Willows |
| BARRIE | Author whose character Peter Pan is immortalised in bronze in Kensington Gardens (6) |
| ALBERT | ___ Memorial, in Kensington Gardens |
| TONGA | Islands seen in Kensington Gardens |
| ROUNDPOND | Perversely named body of water in Kensington Gardens |
| PRAM | It's pushed in Kensington Gardens |
| SCOTT | Architect noted for the Midland Hotel at St Pancras, Albert Memorial in Kensington Gardens and redes |
| PETER | -- Pan; J. M. Barrie's character with a statue in Kensington Gardens (5) |
| ANNE | Lacemaking queen for whom an orangery was built in Kensington Gardens, where she is commemorated with citrus-scented scones today (4) |
| AWALKINTHEPARK | A stroll through Kensington Gardens in a breeze? (1,4,2,3,4) |
| TITO | and 4ac, Italian baritone who produced and played the title role in Giuseppe Verdi opera Simon Boccanegra at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, in 1965 (4,5) |
| GOBBI | and 4ac, Italian baritone who produced and played the title role in Giuseppe Verdi opera Simon Boccanegra at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, in 1965 (4,5) |
| HATTON | ___ Garden, London district known for diamond trading |
| HYDEPARK | Formerly part of Kensington Gardens and Henry VIII's deer chase, 350 acres of land divided by the Serpentine and the Long Water lakes in London (4,4) |
| ROYAL | Title applied to a London park such as Kensington Gardens (5) |