Parks and Gardens UK
 

Early influences

13-737_a-ferdinand-in-the-bBaron Ferdinand de RothschildBorn in Paris on 17 December 1839 into the well-known family of bankers, Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild's interest in gardening was stimulated from an early age. His mother Charlotte (1807-1859) was a keen gardener and gave each of her children a plot of ground at the family farm of Neuhof, just outside Frankfurt, where she had set up a dairy, complete with a Derbyshire dairy maid. 

‘To these [plots] we attended with much zeal and gravity, though were it not for the assistance of the gardener it may be questioned whether they would have produced anything but weeds,' Ferdinand later wrote [1].

Providing small garden plots for one's children to encourage healthy physical activity and to educate them in the natural world, appears to have been part of Victorian life. At Osborne House on the Isle of Wight, Prince Albert Edward, Ferdinand's future close friend, was also made to garden by his parents, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.

Featured Sites
  • Anglesey Abbey, Cambridgeshire. Coronation Avenue. Anglesey Abbey England, Lode. Formal and landscaped gardens of 47 hectares (116 acres) dating from 1926 onwards, surround the former 13th-century Augustinian priory. The garden features a notable collection of statuary, herbaceous borders, a dahlia garden, island shrub beds, and arboretums of conifers and deciduous trees.

  • Birkenhead Park Swiss Bridge Birkenhead Park England, Wirral. Birkenhead Park is a mid-19th-century public park occupying 90 hectares. It features parkland, woodland and meadows as well as two lakes and sports facilities. It is reputed to be the oldest public park in England, and elements of its design occur in Central Park, New York.

  • Claremont Belisle Claremont England, Esher. Claremont has 18th-century landscaped pleasure grounds and a park. Features include a lake, amphitheatre, grotto and water pavilion.

  • South aspect from Craig y Parc Craig y parc Wales, Cardiff. The house and garden are integrated into a strongly axial design, taking full advantage of the southward slope. The garden survives in its entirety, is well preserved, and is a very good example of this type of architectural Edwardian garden.

  • Hall Place, Bexley, East Side Hall Place, Bexley England, Dartford. Hall Place is a Grade I listed manor house surrounded by extensive parkland on the banks of the River Cray at Bexley. There are formal gardens around the house, with topiary and herbaceous borders. The walled gardens contain a plant nursery.

  • Hestercombe Dutch Garden Hestercombe England, Taunton. Hestercombe House is set in 120 hectares of parkland. There is a formal garden of around 3 hectares beside the house, designed by Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude Jekyll from 1904 to 1908. There is also a landscaped valley behind the house of around 13.5 hectares, created by Coplestone Warre Bampfylde between 1750 and 1790.

  • Howick Hall Terrace Howick England, Alnwick. Howick has an early-20th-century woodland garden set within 35 acres of 19th-century wooded pleasure grounds and a 50-hectare late-18th-century parkland.

  • Iscoyd from the Park Iscoyd Park Wales, Grindley Brook. Iscoyd Park is a complete, small 18th-century park, although its origins could be much earlier. It has fine specimen trees such as oak, beech and sycamore, and a pond with a mount next to it. The park was enlarged in the 19th century and boundary oak paling erected at that time. There are pleasure grounds around the house.

  • Little Sodbury Manor, bowling green and steps to terrace Little Sodbury Manor England, South Gloucestershire. Little Sodbury Manor is a garden on a 15th-century site. There are a number of gardens, including a formal garden and a sunken garden. There are also ponds, a kitchen garden, bowling green and many mature trees.

  • Prior Park, Somerset. Palladian Bridge. Close-up. (2006) Prior Park England, Bath. Prior Park is a landscaped pleasure grounds and park, laid out from 1734 on by Ralph Allen with advice from Pope to 1743. There are terraced balustraded steps by Goodridge, dating from 1834. These replaced terraces by Allen and Pope. Other features include a Palladian bridge, two gate lodges and a grotto.

  • Sydney Gardens, Bath, 2007 Sydney Gardens England, Bath. Sydney Gardens occupy a 4 hectare elongated hexagon-shaped site in a residential area to the north-east of Bath. The gardens were opened as a public pleasure ground on the 11th May 1795. They have since been subject to a series of alterations.

  • Mayfield Park Mayfield Park England, Southampton. Mayfield Park is a municipal park in the south-east of Southampton with wooded gardens, a walled garden and playing fields.

  • Dumbleton Old Hall Gardens, possible plan Dumbleton Old Hall England, Dumbleton. The site has humps and hollows in a grass field, the remains of a formal garden which surrounded the 1690s house. An engraving of Dumbleton Hall by Johannes Kip in 1712 shows a formal landscape. A new information panel shows very clearly where the original canals and walkways shown in the Kip engraving were.

  • Kingswood Park, Gates Kingswood Park England, Kingswood, Bristol. Kingswood is a municipal park, first laid out in 1934. There is a children's play area, a bandstand and amphitheatre, tennis courts, formal flower beds, a wetlands area and a bowling green.

  • Glandyfi castle scenic outlook Glandyfi Castle Wales, Machynlleth. Glandyfi Castle is a Regency gothic castle built on a commanding site overlooking the beautiful Dyfi estuary. It has a walled kitchen garden, a setting of mature deciduous woodland, exotic shrubs, lawns and borders.

  • The Gardens of Easton Lodge Easton Lodge Gardens England, Bishop's Stortford. The gardens of Easton Lodge, designed by Harold Peto in 1902, include an Italianate garden, Japanese garden, formal lawns and flower beds, and a rose walk. The gardens have been under restoration since the 1970s.

  • Glyn Aur Garden of Eden Glyn Aur Wales, Abergwili, Carmarthen. Glyn Aur was a cottage garden with extensive topiary, much of it representing biblical figures and events. It was sometimes known as the Garden of Eden. The garden was open in its heyday but is now sadly lost. There are, however, a number of old postcards based on photographs taken by the then owner, which show the full glory of the topiary.

  • Brooksby Hall and Church Brooksby Hall England, Melton Mowbray. Brooksby Hall is set in 31 acres of grounds, sloping northwards down to the River Wreake. The estate is the country campus of Brooksby Melton College of Further Education and offers training in a wide range of country skills. It was formerly the county agricultural college. The Hall, originally a late 16th Century country house, was extended in the late 19th century. It houses administrative offices for the College as well as offering conference, banqueting and wedding facilities. In the grounds to the south of the Hall, is the Church of St Michael, which dominates the landscape. Modern college buildings, dating from the 1950s to 1970s are located to the north and east of the Hall. The gardens, which are informal in style, include a lake and a stream. The wide range of planting reflects the College's status as a horticultural college.

  • Farm Conservation Paths Glenfall House England, Charlton Kings. Glenfall House has a stream garden through a glen with waterfalls. It is partly accessible under Defra's Farm Conservation Scheme until September 2014. The garden has been supplemented by terraces designed by Norman Jewson.

Featured People
  • James Backhouse (3)

    James Backhouse (3) was a nurseryman and alpine specialist active in the 19th century. He was a member of the noted Backhouse family of horticulturalists and naturalists and a member of the Society of Friends.

    Backhouse was born in Darlington, England on 8 July 1794, the son of James Backhouse (2) (1757-1804).

    In 1815, together with his brother, Thomas Backhouse (1792-1845), James Backhouse established James Backhouse & Son of York (and later of Leeds), a plant nursery first based at Telford Nursery, York, on what was once the old York Friars Gardens owned by the Telford family.

    James married Deborah Lowe (1793-1827) of Worcester in November 1822. Deborah had been very ill when she was young, and suffered ill-health after her marriage to James. She died at the age of 34 on 10 December 1827, and was memorialised by her husband in A Memoir of Deborah Backhouse of York, 1828.

    In 1831, Backhouse embarked on a combined missionary tour and plant collecting expedition of Australia, Mauritius and southern Africa, leaving his two young children in the care of family. During his decade abroad, he corresponded with his friends and family in England, including his brother Thomas who was managing and developing the nursery in his absence.

    In 1851, together with his son, James (4) (1825-1890), he travelled to Norway. The two also toured the Arctic Circle and several parts of Great Britain in search of plants.  Backhouse died in 1869.

     

    Sources:

    Backhouse, James, A Memoir of Deborah Backhouse of York; Who Died the Tenth of the Twelfth Month, 1827; Aged Thirty-four Years (W. Alexander & Son, York, 1828).

    Davis, Peter, ‘Backhouse family (per. c.1770–1945)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 2004) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/56500> [accessed
    21 Nov 2008]

    - 'The Backhouses of Weardale, Co. Durham, and Sutton Court, Hereford: Their Botanical and Horticultural Interests', Garden History, Vol. 18, No. 1 (Spring, 1990), pp. 57-68.

    Hadfield, Miles, Robert Harling and Leonine Highton, British Gardeners: A Biographical Dictionary (London: A. Zwemmer Ltd., 1980), p. 19.

    Further reading:

    Mary Bartram Trott, 'Backhouse, James (1794 - 1869)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1 (Melbourne University Press, 1966), pp 45-46.

    Also online at: Mary Bartram Trott, 'Backhouse, James (1794 - 1869)', Australian Dictionary of Biography at http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A010042b.htm [accessed 12/01/2009] .

     

     

     

  • Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, 4th Earl of Cork

    Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington and 4th Earl of Cork, was an architect and garden designer, a major landowner in Ireland and in England, and a great patron of the arts, active in the 18th century.

    In England he had houses at Londesborough, in London's Piccadilly and at Chiswick. Boyle was born at Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, England on 25 April 1694.  He died on 3 December 1753 at Chiswick and was buried in the family vault at Londesborough on 15 December 1753. Boyle is particularly noted for his patronage of William Kent and for his promotion of the revival of the Palladian style.

    Sources:

    Colvin, Howard, A Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840, 3rd edition (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1995), pp. 147-152.

    Kingsbury, Pamela Denman, ‘Boyle, Richard, third earl of Burlington and fourth earl of Cork (1694–1753)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Jan 2008) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/3136> [accessed 21 Nov 2008]

    Further Reading:

    Carre, Jacques, 'Lord Burlington's Garden at Chiswick', Garden History, Vol. 1, No. 3 (Summer, 1973), pp. 23-30.

     

  • William Goldring William Goldring

    William Goldring was a designer active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was assistant editor of The Garden and editor of Woods and Forests between 1879 and 1886. He later set up as a landscape architect in 1887.

    Goldring's work included private houses, asylums and public parks and commissions in India, France and the United States. He was President of the Kew Guild in 1913.  

  • Painshill Chinese Bridge The Honourable Charles Hamilton

    The Honourable Charles Hamilton was the owner and designer of Painshill in Surrey, England.

    He was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1704, the youngest son of James, 6th Earl of Abercorn.  Educated in England Hamilton attended Westminster School, where he became friends with Henry Hoare (later the owner of Stourhead). He went on to Christchurch College, Oxford graduating in 1723.

    Hamilton made two extended Grand Tours of Europe between 1725 and 1732. He spent much time in Italy, where he amassed a considerable collection of antiquities and paintings, and studied landscape painting.

    In 1727 he became the member for Strabane in the Irish Parliament, a position he held for 33 years. In 1738, he was made a Clerk of the Household to Frederick, Prince of Wales. Under the Prince's patronage, from 1741 to 1746, he was member for Truro in the English Parliament.

    Between 1736 and 1737 Hamilton purchased some 300 acres of land near Cobham in Surrey to form the estate of Painshill.  Between 1738 and 1744 he laid out much of the ornamental landscape, including the lake, planting many new tree species, particularly those from North America.

    From 1746, after he had fallen out of favour with the Prince of Wales, Hamilton began to devote more time to perfecting his creation, adding many of the follies at Painshill between 1758 and 1762.  He also laid out the gardens of Holland House in Kensington, London, England for his friend Henry Fox in the late 1740s.

    Money was always an issue for Hamilton, who had no independent income.  In 1743 he became Reciever General of His Majesty's Revenues in Minorca, for which he received £1,200 a year. The loss of this post between 1757 and 1763 due to military action, caused him significant financial hardship. From 1758 to 1765 he was deputy to the Paymaster General, which allowed him to continue work at Painshill.

    In March 1766, Hamilton mortgaged his estate for £6,000 to his friend, the banker Henry Hoare.  Attempts to resolve his financial difficulties failed, and in 1771 Hamilton was forced to put Painshill up for sale.

    Hamilton's first wife had died young, leaving two daughters, Jane and Sarah.  Hamilton was married again in 1764 to Agnes Cockburn of Ayr, Scotland. She too died at the age of 39, in 1772.

    In 1773 Painshill was sold and Hamilton settled in The Royal Crescent, Bath, England. The following year he married Frances Calvert.  Over the next few years, he worked on the gardens at Bowood in Wiltshire, England for his friend, Lord Shelburne.  He died on 18 September 1786.

     

  • Londesborough, grave of Thomas Knowlton Thomas Knowlton

    Thomas Knowlton was born in Kent, England and was well known in his lifetime as a botanist and gardener with a special interest in nature, wildflowers and hothouse exotics.

    He was in charge of the botanic garden of the physician James Sherand at Eltham, Kent and in 1726 he moved to Londesborough, East Yorkshire, England to work for the 3rd Earl of Burlington. It seems that Knowlton spent the rest of his working life as head gardener at Londesborough. 

    Knowlton was greatly interested in the latest information about the natural world, both native and foreign. He travelled to Guernsey, Holland and London, England and shared his botanical and gardening knowledge with other plant collectors.

    While he was in charge at Londesborough he also acted as an advisor at other local English estates, such as Everingham, Burton Constable and Birdsall, located in East and North Yorkshire. His additional earnings enabled him to invest in property, literary collections and botanical purchases.

    Knowlton's expertise in exotics also enabled him to gain prominence within the landowning elite. Indeed, he was responsible for building the hothouses at Londesborough (1729) and Burton Constable (1758).

    Knowlton died aged 90, in 1781 and was buried in the churchyard at Londesborough.

    Sources:

    Henry, B No Ordinary Gardener: Thomas Knowlton, 1691-1781 (1986)

    Seccombe, T., ‘Knowlton, Thomas (1691–1781)’, rev. P. E. Kell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15777> [accessed 27 February 2008]

     

  • Charles McIntosh

    Charles McIntosh was born at Abercairney in Perthshire where his father, John, was head gardener. Charles duly succeeded him, before moving to undertake similar responsibilities at the greatly more extensive grounds of Taymouth Castle, where he continued to develop his knowledge of forestry, orchard, kitchen-garden and hothouse management.

    By 1825 he had taken charge of the grounds at Stratton Park, Hampshire, home of the banker Sir Thomas Baring. Whilst there, he contributed to the first issue of Loudon's Gardener's Magazine, redesigned the gardens at Pengethley in Herefordshire, laid out and planted the newly created pleasure gardens and conservatory attached to the Colisseum in The Regent's Park, and compiled and had published his first major work of two volumes: The Practical Gardener and Modern Horticulturalist.

    McIntosh's energy and intelligence brought him to the attention of Prince Leopold (subsequently the first king of the Belgians) and for 10 years he made great improvements to the grounds adjacent to the royal residence at Claremont House in Surrey. Leopold took McIntosh to Belgium where he remodelled the gardens at Laeken.

    In 1838 McIntosh returned to Scotland to undertake his greatest role, that of head gardener to the immensely wealthy Duke of Buccleuch, whose palace gardens at Dalkeith McIntosh updated and modernised to great effect - not least the vast range of productive hothouses that were amongst the most extensive in the UK. It was here that he wrote his major work, The Book of the Garden (also in two volumes), which remained in print long after his death.

    Upon his retirement in 1858 McIntosh continued landscaping and improving the villa residences, parks and gardens of the gentry and nobility in Scotland and England. He was an active corresponding member of the Royal Horticultural Society, and also those of The Caledonian and Massachusetts.

    Charles McIntosh never set out to emulate such figures as Lancelot Brown or Humphry Repton, but remained at the cutting edge of contemporary horticultural techniques about which he wrote extensively; perhaps his greatest area of expertise being that of hot-house design and heating.

    He was known to Queen Victoria and could count among his friends John Claudius Loudon (1783-1843), Professor John Lindley (1799-1865) and Sir Joseph Paxton (1803-1865). Like Paxton, McIntosh gained the trust and confidence of those whom he served and throughout his life contributed greatly to the scientific and practical advancement of his profession.

    He died at his residence in Murrayfield near Edinburgh in January 1864.  McIntosh also received a fulsome obituary in The Gardener's Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette of 16 January 1864, in which he was referred to as a 'Veteran in the ranks of horticulturalists...who had occupied a prominent position in the horticultural world'.

    Published Works:

    • Charles McIntosh The New and Improved Practical Gardener and Modern Horticulturalist (1828-29, 2 vols) London
    • Charles McIntosh Flora and Pomona (1829-31) London
    • Charles McIntosh The Flower Garden (1838) London
    • Charles McIntosh The Greenhouse, Hothouse and Stove (1838) London
    • Charles McIntosh The Orchard (1839) London
    • Charles McIntosh The Book of The Garden (1853-55, 2 vols) London
    • Charles McIntosh The Larch Disease (1860) London 

    Contributor: Jonathan Cass

     

  • Broughton Hall parterre William Andrews Nesfield

    William Andrews Nesfield, watercolour painter and landscape gardener, was born in Chester-le-Street, Co. Durham, England and was baptised there on 16 June 1794.

    He was educated in England at a preparatory school in Winchester, which was followed by an unhappy year at Winchester College. He spent two terms at Trinity College, Cambridge, before becoming a cadet at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, in 1809. He was taught there by Thomas Paul Sandby, the son of the watercolourist Paul Sandby. 

    In the autumn of 1813 Nesfield left for the Peninsula War, where he was at Jean de Luz and the attack on Bayonne. He resigned in 1818 to become a watercolourist.

    Nesfield was famous for his cascades and looked for subjects in Piedmont and the Swiss Alps, but his landscapes were more often found closer to home in England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

    He settled in 1820 in London, England had a period in other cities in southern England, before moving into his long-term house at 3 York Terrace, Regent's Park.

    From about the time of his marriage to Emma Mills (died 1874) on 13 July 1833, he began a new career as a landscape gardener, often in collaboration with Anthony Salvin (1779-1881). Cascades played their part in his work, although he is best known for his parterres. For two decades he was a sought-after landscape designer, working at various houses in England including Arundel Castle, Sussex; Castle Howard, Yorkshire; Crewe Hall, Cheshire.  

    He died at his home in York Terrace on 2 March 1881, leaving less than £5,000.

    Sources:

    Seccombe, T., ‘Nesfield, William Andrews (bap. 1794, d. 1881)’, rev. Huon Mallalieu, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/19901 >

     

  • Mr Walter Nicol

    Walter Nicol was born in Niddry, not far from Edinburgh. He was the son of a gardener but as a young boy stubbornly refused to follow his father’s profession, preferring an apprenticeship to a shoemaker.

    It was during the time that his father, John Nicol, had management of the gardens of the Raith Estate, near Kirkcaldy, however, that Walter experienced a dramatic change of heart. Despite blindness in his right eye caused by a childhood affliction, Walter became a proficient land surveyor and draughtsman.

    His first position as a gardener, in 1787, took him to Raynham Hall, the Norfolk home of the Marquess of Townshend. Two years later, he returned to Scotland to take charge of the gardens of Wemyss Castle, Fife, recently re-designed by his father, where he remained until 1797.

    Walter made significant additions to his father's layout and drew up lavish designs for heated walls to enable the forcing of tree-fruit, his avowed aim being 'to provide stone fruit for almost every month of the year'. He also designed pineapple pits and mushroom houses. Nicol's friend and editor, Edward Sang, wrote later: 'No spot in the kingdom could exhibit a nicer display of horticultural skill'.

    The decision for Nicol and his family to suddenly to leave Wemyss may have been due to the rising costs of the hothouse furnaces, which used 100 tons of coal per annum.

    The Scotch Forcing and Kitchen Gardener, was published in 1797 and remained in print for the next 20 years. Nicol took to advertising within his own publications and came to regard The Practical Planter of 1799 as the work which brought him most favourably to the notice of a wide audience, particularly in Scotland.

    His primary skills lay in the design and maintenance of hothouses, the maintenance of kitchen and flower gardens, as well as the profitable rejeuvenation of forestry plantations.

    In 1800 Nicol began the improvement of the parkland surrounding the splendid mansion at Duncrub near Crieff, Perthshire for Lord Rollo. He undertook much of his work in that county and later worked at Invermay in 1802, Ochtertyre in 1805 and at Gartmore. In 1806 he travelled to Dalhousie Castle in Mid-Lothian where he redesigned the walled gardens and laid out the principal driveway to the north.

    Nicol was of the opinion that several different kinds of soil could be necessary in the same garden, often removing thousands of cubic yards of gravel or clay and replacing the original substrate with more fertile soils to achieve a base for horticultural perfection. His methods have been emulated by landscape gardeners ever since.

    Through the continuing success of his endeavours and the popularity of his reference works, Nicol was invited to become a founder member of the Caledonian Horticultural Society in 1809, appointed joint-secretary and nominated for the judging committee.

    As with so many of his generation, Nicol was possessed of worthy ambitions and rigour of mind that over-exerted his constitution. Seemingly in his prime and having overcome a debilitating rheumatic fever just a few years previously, Nicol undertook the writing of The Planter's Kalendar and agreed to write a treatise on gardens and orchards for the Board of Agriculture. Intending to complete these objectives with his customary thoroughness, Nicol resolved upon an extended tour of the principal estates in England.

    On 1 January 1811, upon his return to Scotland, he caught a severe chill, which duly developed into an oedema. He died on 5 March 1811,  just short of his 42nd birthday. Fifteen years after his death he was described by J.C.Loudon as 'a Scotch horticultural architect and author of merit'. Patrick Neill, joint-secretary of The Caledonian Horticultural Society with Nicol, wrote of him in 1843 that he was, 'A most distinguished horticulturalist of his day, and eminent in his profession as a landscape gardener'.

    Published Works:

    "The Scotch Forcing and Kitchen Gardener" 1797

    "The Practical Planter" 1799

    "The Villa Garden Directory"1809

    "The Gardener's Kalendar" 1810

    "The Planter's Kalendar" 1812

    Sources:

    www.historic-scotland.gov.uk

    www.hcs.osu.edu/history

    Tait, A, A (1980) The Landscape Gardener in Scotland 1735-1835, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

    Byrom, C (2000) "Walter Nicol (1769-1811): A Life Revealed" RCHS Journal

    Sang, E (2000) "Biographick Memoir..." RCHS journal 2000

    McIntosh, C (1853) The Book of the Garden William Blackwood, London

    Also with grateful thanks to Ms.Charlotte Wemyss, Wemyss Castle, Fife, and Mr.W.Duncan, Drumeldrie, Fife.

    Contributor: Jonathan Cass

     

  • Benington Lordship, inscribed stone James Pulham (1)

    James Pulham was the founder of what became one of the most successful firms of landscape gardeners in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

    There were four generations of Pulhams, each called James. James Pulham senior was born in Woodbridge, Suffolk.  His date of birth is uncertain, but is likely to have been between 1788 and 1796.

    James and his brother Obadiah were apprenticed to John Lockwood, a local builder, where they developed a talent for stone modelling. The Pulham brothers gradually took over the business after 1824 when it moved to London, specialising in the production of artificial stone and ornamentation.

    James Pulham died suddenly in 1838 and the business was taken over by his son, James, then aged 18. The firm did not become known as Pulham and Son until 1865, when the third James joined the firm.

    Source:

    http://www.pulham.org.uk, accessed 14 May 2008

    To learn more about James Pulham & Son, please click here to go to the Historical Profile article: www.parksandgardens.ac.uk/274/explore-31/historical-profiles-176/james-pulham-and-son-336/limitstart-1.html  

  • Mr Thomas Andrew Knight

    Thomas Knight, one of Britain’s most influential botanists, was born at Wormesley Grange in Herefordshire. He was the son of a parson and the younger brother of Richard Payne Knight, the classical scholar whose main thrust of work related to theories of the Picturesque. Thomas who was largely self-taught, was educated at Balliol College, Oxford.

    Knight's enduring interest in animal and plant life led him to create a walled harden and modest range of hothouses at his farm at Elton Hall in 1786, where he concentrated on plant growing and livestock breeding. He may well have remained thus but for two significant events.

    The first was that Sir Joseph Banks of the London Horticultural Society (later the Royal Horticultural Society) noted the intelligence of Knight’s written work and encouraged his experiments with plant physiology and breeding. In April 1795, Knight read his paper to the Society entitled, 'The grafting of Fruit Trees'. He was aware that many of Britain’s older fruit varieties were in decline, notably apples and pears as well as cherries, plums and nectarines. Furthermore he had observed that disease could be passed on by grafting and that poor or irregular cropping of older varieties were affecting trade volumes during a period of particular difficulty - namely, Britain’s lengthening war with France. He regularly corresponded with Banks and published his Treatise on the Culture of the Apple and Pear in 1797.

    The second event was that in 1806, Thomas Knight inherited the considerable estate of Downton Castle from his brother. With the benefit of his pioneering skills in plant breeding and 10,000 acres of land at his disposal, Knight continued to develop disease-resistant cultivars of tree fruits in their many thousands. His work also raised stocks of potatoes, peas and cabbages to new standards of excellence. He is perhaps best remembered for the Downton Strawberry, or 'Knight's Seedling'.

    Knight's published and practical work encouraged landowners, commercial nurserymen and gentlemen gardeners to adopt his findings and to plant new, vigorous varieties with great success. No less a scholarly work, but with exquisite illustrations was Knight's second volume, Pomona Herefordensis, published in 1809. Two years later he was rewarded with the office of President of the London Horticultural Society, a position to which he was re-elected annually until his death.

    Thomas Knight was arguably the most innovative botanist of his era. Although his theory of 'degeneration' of fruit has since been disproved by modern methods, his observations of phototropism (the tendency of a plant to turn towards a source of light) and the cambium (the cellular plant tissue responsible for the increase in girth of stems and roots), and his studies on the ascent and descent of sap, have long been accepted facts of plant physiology.

    He was held in high regard by contemporary practitioners and writers, notably Charles McIntosh, who wrote in 1826 that 'To the exertions of Knight...we are indebted, for many of our best fruits, and not only the improvements of our native sorts, but also for the introduction of several foreign kinds'.

    Professor John Lindley, delivering his introductory lecture to the University of London on 30 April 1824 was yet more fulsome in his praise for Knight: 'Nine-tenths of the most important discoveries that have been made in modern Horticulture, especially the art of regulating and adapting artificial climate to vegetation, are due to the botanical knowledge of the most distinguished vegetable physiologist of this kingdom; whose successful attempts at applying science to practice have recently been crowned, if I may so express myself, by the complete subjugation of the unmanageable constitution of the Pine-apple'.

    In 1991, a little over 150 years after Knight's death in 1838, Tim Smit and John Nelson patiently restored the ‘lost’ gardens of Heligan, Cornwall. In rebuilding the pineapple pits to a productive standard, they chose to work to the designs that had been drawn up by Knight in 1822, which had so impressed Lindley and others in their day. The first ripe specimens from Heligan were cut just five years later.   

    Published Works

    Knight, T, A (1797) Treatise on the Culture of the Apple and Pear, London

    Knight, T, A (1809) Pamona Herefordensis, London

    Numerous papers in the Royal Horticultural Society collection

    Sources

    Beauman, F. (2005) The Pineapple, King of Fruits Chatto & Windus, London, pp. 253

    Darrow, G, M (1965) "The Strawberry: History, Breeding and Physiology"
    www.nal.usda.gov/pgdic/Strawberry/book/boksix.htm

    History of Horticulturewww.hcs.ohio-state.edu/hort/history/079.html

    McIntosh, C (1828) The Practical Gardener and Modern Horticulturalist Vol 1. Thomas Kelly, London

    The Peerage.comhttp://thepeerage.com p17531.htm#i 175307

    www.rootsandleaves.com (Knight family history/Wormsley Grange)

    Shull, C.A & Stanfield, F (1939) "Plant Physiology, Thomas Andrew Knight in Memoriam". Vol 14. No.1 Univ. of Chicago
    www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/reprint/14/1/1

    Stearn, William (1999) John Lindley 1799-1865, Gardener, Botanist and Pioneer Orchidologist Antique Collectors Club, London pp. 85

    Contributor: Jonathan Cass

  • Blaise Castle, Bristol Humphry Repton

    Humphry Repton, landscape designer, was born on 21 April 1752 at Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, England. He is regarded as the last great landscape designer of the 18th century and was determined to succeed 'Capability' Brown.

    Despite early business failures in the textile industry Repton was able to call upon his social contacts to become patrons for his first landscape commissions. His first was at Catton, Norfolk, England for the mayor and textile merchant, Jeremiah Ives, and his second was at Holkham, England (1788) for Thomas Coke. 

    Repton viewed landscaping as an art form and this can be found when studying his renowned 'Red Books' or folios, which he used to present his plans, drawings, maps and passages of writing. Not all of his commissions were associated with a Red Book, but they were nonetheless, an important element of his landscape repetoire.

    Towards the end of the 18th century, Repton was embroiled in a dispute with Richard Payne Knight and Uvedale Price regarding the development of the Picturesque. The dispute centred on the relationship between landscape gardening and landscape painting. Knight and Price were experts on the master painters and as such believed that the improvement of landscapes should be based on the rules of landscape art; Repton vehemently disagreed.

    Despite these disputes Repton maintained his reputation and was employed at a large number of estates, particularly in England, including Welbeck Abbey, Nottinghamshire; Woburn Abbey, Bedforshire; Tatton Park, Cheshire; Longleet, Wiltshire; Harewood House, West Yorkshire; and Cobham Hall, Kent. 

    Repton died on 24 March 1818 at Hare Street in Essex, where he had spent the last four years corresponding with his friends and family as well as writing his memoirs.

  • Robert Smythson

    Robert Smythson, architect and mason, was 79 at the time of his death. However, there is no evidence that indicates the exact date or year of his birth.

    There is evidence to suggest, however, that Smythson was working at Longleat House, Wiltshire, England by 1568 where he was employed as master mason by Sir John Thynne. Within 10 years Smythson is known to have been working on alterations at Wardour Castle, Wiltshire for the Arundell family. The castle later became a picturesque feature within the 18th-century landscape developed by a later generation of the family.

    It has been suggested that Robert Smythson's connection with Wardour provided him with his commission at Wollaton Hall in Nottinghamshire. There he was Surveyor of the Works between 1530 and 1588. Other notable works or commissions in England included Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire (1590-1); Burton Agnes, Yorkshire (1601-10); and Welbeck Abbey, Nottinghamshire, all of which reveal Smythson's firm understanding of classical architecture.

    His son, Sir John Smythson also worked at Wollaton, in the service of the Cavendish rather than the Willoughby family. Robert died at Wollaton on 15 October 1614.

  • Temple of the Four Winds, Castle Howard, 2002 Sir John Vanbrugh

    Sir John Vanbrugh, playwright, designer and architect, was one of the most influential members of the British 'baroque' movement of the late 17th and early 18th centuries.

    He was born as the fourth child of 19 in 1664. By 1667 Vanburgh and his family had settled in Chester, England following the outbreak of plague in London.

    In 1681 Vanbrugh and William Matthews, his cousin, ventured into the London wine business, although this was to last for less than a year. A year later he joined the East India Company where he served for four years. During this time it is likely that he visited India and may well have begun to appreciate the architecture of the East. 

    In 1688 Vanbrugh found himself in France with Lord Willoughby, having praised William of Orange who had recently declared war with France. For the previous two years Vanbrugh had served in the 7th Earl of Huntingdon's infantry regiment.

    Vanbrugh was soon arrested in Calais and was held for a time in the city's citadel. He was to spend a period in the Bastille before returning to England, with no papers, in 1692.

    On his return, Vanbrugh became a member of the Whig political and literary circle known as the 'Kit-Cat Club'. The club's serious aim was to secure the Protestant succession against the heirs of the Catholic James II. For Vanbrugh however, the club became an important source of architectural clients. This was where he met Charles Howard, the 3rd Earl of Carlisle, who was looking to commission an architect to build an ancestral home in Yorkshire, England.

    Having won the commission ahead of William Talman, Vanbrugh's plans for Castle Howard were made, revised and approved by 1699. The palace is profusely decorated, with a central building encased in an order of giant pilasters and surmounted by a large dome. The form of the interior harked back to royal palaces, as visitors moved further into progressively private apartments to the east and west. 

    The exterior of the house reveals more interesting details typical of Vanbrugh. The southern façade facing the parterre consists of a nine-bay, two-storey face with single storey wings. The 10 fluted Corinthian pilasters are on a large scale, while the central four bays are more prominent, crowned by a central pediment. Pevsner suggests that the area is ‘eminently festive' and as such celebrates the parterre it faces.

    The landscape, which in the main lies to the south of the house, shows signs of Vanbrugh's design aesthetic. The Carrmire Gate, for example, is the first element of the designed landscape that the visitor encounters when approaching the house. A rustic pointed arch is flanked on either side by castellated walls, terminating in circular bastions. Here the design includes both medieval and antique motifs through the use of classical doorways, as well as the medieval arrow-slit windows. Other landscape features including the large-scale bastion walls and Pyramid Gate similarly hark back to an earlier, 'golden' past that incorporated medieval, Roman, and Classical symbolism.

    This Classical theme is repeated throughout the landscape through the Temples of Venus and the Four Winds, as well as the parterre with its inclusion of statues and obelisks. Each of these features can be found to relate directly to the works of Andrea Palladio, the Renaissance theorist and designer.  

    Vanbrugh's other notable commission was that of Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire, another building of palatial proportions, and soon to be home of John Churchill, the 1st Duke of Marlborough. On his return from victory at the Battle of Blenheim (1704), John Churchill was greeted with a hero's reward of Woodstock Park in Oxfordshire, which was granted by Parliament in March 1705. Marlborough requested a design similar to that of Castle Howard, but it became larger and more dramatic.

    In the surrounding landscape, Vanbrugh was responsible for the large parterre, flanked on either side by bastion walls. Half a mile to the south-east, a second parterre was designed with two round pools and four 100-foot bastions, punctuating 14-foot-high brick walls. 

    Vanbrugh's other notable works in England included Stowe and its designed landscape in Buckinghamshire (1720); Vanbrugh Castle, Greenwich (1718); Seaton Delaval, Northumberland (1720-28); Duncombe Park, Yorkshire (1713); Grimsthorpe Castle, Lincolnshire (1725).

    During the years between his military and architectural careers, Vanbrugh was also a playwright. His most famous works include The Relapse, and the Provok'd Wife. 

      

    Sources:

    Downes, Kerry, Sir John Vanbrugh: A Biography (Sidgwick and Jackson, 1987) 

    - ‘Vanbrugh, Sir John (1664–1726)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004 < http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/28059> [accessed 8 Oct 2007]

    Switzer, Stephen, Iconographia Rustica, Vol. II (D. Brown, 1718) 

     

  • Mrs Jane Wells Loudon

    Jane Wells Loudon (née Webb) was an author, a prolific writer on botanical, horticultural and natural science subjects and a magazine editor active in the 19th century.  She was born near Birmingham, England on 19 August 1807, the daughter of a businessman, Thomas Webb.

    Jane's mother died when she was 12 years old. Her father died around five years later. As a result of the financial constraints she faced, Jane started writing to earn a living.

    Jane's first work was Prose and Verse (1824) and her second was a science fiction novel, The Mummy! A Tale of the Twenty-Second Century. The latter was published anonymously in 1827.

    When author and landscape designer John Claudius Loudon (1783-1843) read and reviewed The Mummy! the following year, he was intrigued by it, particularly its mention of the use of steam ploughs, and wanted to meet its anonymous author. He was rather surprised to discover that the author was a woman, rather than the man he had expected, when he finally met Jane in 1830. By this stage Jane had also written Stories of a Bride (1829) and soon would write Conversations on Chronology (1830).

    The pair were married seven months after their first meeting, and Jane worked closely with her husband for the rest of his life. They lived at 3 Porchester Terrace, Bayswater, London where they cultivated a small garden, designed by Mr. Loudon, and had an impressive collection of plants.

    Jane studied botany after her marriage. She attended lectures by the renowned botanist John Lindley (1799-1865), after whom the Royal Horticultural Society's Lindley Library is named, and often wrote up her notes as articles. She travelled widely with her husband, acting as secretary to him on trips throughout the British Isles, helping him to compile, record and edit his books and periodicals, working as his literary assistant, into the early hours of the morning.

    Increased debt incurred during her marriage caused Jane to turn to writing again herself. In 1838 she penned the Young Lady's Book of Botany (1838) and in 1839 Agnes, or the Little Girl who Kept a Promise (1839).  In 1840 she wrote the very successful Instructions in Gardening for Ladies, as well as the Ladies' Flower-Garden of Ornamental Annuals (four volumes 1840-1848) and The Young Naturalist's Journey: or the Travels of Agnes Merton and Her Mama (1840).

    These latter works were highly accessible, practical books and, as a result, were extremely popular with readers, in particular with female amateur gardeners. They went through several editions and were quickly followed by many other works including The Ladies' Flower-Garden of Ornamental Bulbous Plants (1841), The First Book of Botany … for Schools and Young Persons (1841), Lady's Companion to the Flower Garden. Being an Alphabetical Arrangement of all the Ornamental Plants Usually Grown in Gardens and Shrubberies (1841) and Botany for Ladies, or, a Popular Introduction to the Natural System of Plants (1842).

    In 1842 Jane founded and edited the Lady's Magazine of Gardening. A year later, she was widowed. In December 1843, John Claudius Loudon died. With his death, Jane faced even greater financial hardship. She continued to write gardening books, often with the help of her daughter, Agnes (born 1832), and to edit and publish earlier editions of both her and her husband's works. 

    In 1844 Jane received an award from the Royal Literary Fund. She received a civil-list pension of £100 in 1846. Chief among her publications at this stage were her British Wild Flowers (1845), Amateur Gardener's Calender (1847), the Lady's Country Companion at Home and Abroad (which she edited between 1849 and 1851), The Ladies' Flower-Garden of Ornamental Greenhouse Plants (1848), Tales About Plants (1853) and My Own Garden, Or, The Young Gardener's Year Book (1855).

    Jane died at her London home on 15 July 1858, aged 50. She was survived by her daughter, Agnes and is buried at Kensal Green cemetery.

     

    Sources:

    Desmond, Ray, Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturists (London: Taylor & Francis, 1994), pp. 437-438.

    National Archives, National Register of Archives, Person Details, 'Loudon, Jane Wells (1807-1858) nee Webb, Horticultural Writer, GB/NNAF/P141195' <http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/searches/subjectView.asp?ID=P17889> [accessed 25 September 2008]

    Shteir, Ann B.,  ‘Loudon , Jane (1807–1858)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/17030> [accessed 25 Sept 2008]

    Way, Twigs, Virgins, Weeders and Queens:  A History of Women in the Garden (Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton, 2006) 

    Further Reading:

    Gathorne-Hardy, Robert, Garden Flowers from Plates by Jane Loudon, (London and New York: B. T. Batsford, 1948)

    Howe, Bea, Lady with Green Fingers: The Life of Jane Loudon (London: Country Life, 1961)

    Loudon, J. C., In Search of English Gardens: The Travels of John Claudius Loudon and his Wife Jane, edited by Priscilla Boniface (Wheathampstead: Lennard Publishers, 1987)

  • Pearson Park, Hull, plaque of Zachariah Charles Pearson Mr Zachariah Charles Pearson

    Zachariah Charles Pearson was twice Mayor of Hull. During this time he bought land off Beverley Road, and donated 27 acres of this to the people of Hull as a public park, which bears his name.

    Unsuccessful business ventures during the American Civil War led to his bankruptcy.

     

    For further information visit the family web site at:

    http://www.familypearson.com/Content/537 

  • Ralph Hancock Ralph Hancock

    Ralph Hancock was born Clarence Henry Ralph Hancock in Cardiff on 2 July 1893. 

    He served in World War I, being promoted from Private to 2nd Lieutenant, but was wounded and invalided out. He married in 1917, and his son, Bramley Hancock, who later joined him in his business was born the following year.

    He designed a number of important gardens including the "Garden of Nations" and the Promenade on Fifth Avenue at the Rockefeller
    Centre, New York in 1935 , the roof garden at Derry and Toms in Kensington, London, now the Kensington Roof Garden, in 1938 and a roof garden at Windsor Castle. He also designed and built a sunken garden at Ferrining in Sussex for Edward Hulton, the newspapaer magnate.

    He was a regular Gold Medal winner at Chelsea and exhibitor in the Ideal Home Exhibitions both before and after World War II.

    Hancock died in London on 30 August 1950.

    Further details can be found at   http://www.ralphhancock.com

     

     

  • Mavis Batey in 2008 Mrs Mavis Lilian Batey

    Mavis Batey is a historian of gardens and literature, and the author of many books and articles.  She was Honorary Secretary of the Garden History Society from 1971 to 1985, and President from 1985 to 2000.

    Mrs. Batey was born Mavis Lever in Norbury, south London.  She married Keith Batey in 1942. From 1940 to 1945, Mrs. Batey served as a code-breaker for British Intelligence at Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire .

    In the 1960s Mrs. Batey was active in the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England. From 1970 to 1992, she was a tutor in the history of landscape at the Oxford Department of External Studies.

    As Honorary Secretary of the Garden History Society, Mavis Batey played a leading role in the campaign to protect and conserve historic parks and gardens in the 1970s and 1980s. 

    She helped to gain legal and official recognition for historic gardens, and, working with the Historic Buildings Council, instigated the formal recording of historic gardens which led to the publication of English Heritage's Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England in 1984. She was a member of the English Heritage Historic Parks and Gardens Panel from 1984 to 1994.

    Mrs. Batey was awarded the Veitch Memorial Medal of the Royal Horticultural Society in 1985, and received the MBE in 1987 for services to the preservation and conservation of historic gardens.

     

  • Thomas Johnes, a sketch Thomas Johnes

    Thomas Johnes was a leading exponent of the Picturesque, an aesthete, book collector and agricultural improver. He created the mansion and landscape at Hafod in the bleak mining landscape of his family lands.

  • Thomas Rivers (1797 - 1877) Thomas Rivers (the third)

    Thomas Rivers, the third of that name, was born in Sawbridgeworth in 1797. He consolidated the reputation of the nursery that his grandfather founded. His major interest was the breeding and introduction of new varieties of fruit.

    He was responsible for more than 75 different varieties including peach, nectarine, plum, cherry, apple, apricot and pears. Charles Darwin corresponded with him and sought his advice on a regular basis.

    Rivers published The Orchard House or the Cultivation of Fruit Trees in Pots under Glass in 1851.

  • Statue of John Parkinson, Palm House, Sefton Park John Parkinson

    John Parkinson, born in 1566 or 1567 (probably in England), wrote the first substantial book on English gardening, and was one of the first British botanists.

    He started his working life in medicine, beginning his apprenticeship to a London apothecary, Francis Slater, at Christmas 1585 and completed serving it in 1593. He went on to become one of the most respected apothecaries in Britain. When the Society of Apothecaries was established in December 1617, John Parkinson was one of the founding members, and served on its governing body, the Court of Assistants. He contributed to the first Pharmacopoeia Londinensis, produced by the College of Physicians. He was elected junior warden of the Society of Apothecaries in August 1620 but at the beginning of 1622, he asked for, and was granted, permission to give up his duties in the Society.

    Parkinson then concentrated on his garden in London's Long Acre and started researching and writing his first book: Paradisi in sole paradisus terrestris. or A garden of all sorts of pleasant flowers which our English ayre will permitt to be noursed vp; with a kitchen garden of all manner of herbes, rootes, & fruites, for meate or sause vsed with vs, and an orchard of all sorte of fruitbearing trees and shrubbes fit for our land together with the right orderinge planting & preseruing of them and their vses & vertues collected by Iohn Parkinson apothecary of London 1629.

    The book included descriptions of around 1,000 plants, giving information about their origins, alternative names and medicinal properties. Almost 800 of the plants were illustrated. Parkinson dedicated the book to Queen Henrietta Maria and, in return, was given the title Botanicus Regius Primarius (First Botanist to the King) by King Charles I.

    He worked for years on his second book, Theatrum Botanicum (short title), which was published in 1640. In it, he described approximately 3,800 plants and their medicinal properties, and referenced many other authors of herbals and botanical books.

    John Parkinson was a close friend of John Tradescant the Elder. He had close ties with many other leading plantsmen, herbalists, gardeners and botanists of his time, such as William Coys, John Gerard, Vespasian Robin, and Maathias L'Obel (also known as Lobelius). He collected new varieties of plants through people that he knew abroad and, as early as 1607 had funded William Boel's plant-collecting expedition to Iberia and Africa. Parkinson was the first person in Britain to grow the Spanish double-flowered daffodil. 

    He died in the summer of 1650 and was buried at Saint Martin-in-the-Fields in London on 6 August 1850. He continued to be celebrated in the 19th century. One of the statues in the Palm House, Sefton Park, Liverpool, commemorates John Parkinson.

    Sources:

    Burnby, Juanita, ‘Parkinson, John (1566/7–1650)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/21372> [accessed 18 May 2008]

    <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/depsta/iss/library/speccoll/bomarch/bomapril05.html > [accessed 18 May 2008]

    English Short Title Catalogue (online at British Library web site) <http://estc.bl.uk/

    Further reading:

    John Riddell. 'John Parkinson's Long Acre Garden 1600-1650', Journal of Garden History, Vol. 6, no.2, 1986, pp. 112-124.

     

  • Ken Worpole Ken Worpole

    Ken Worpole is a freelance writer on architecture, landscape and public policy. He has written a number of books on landscape, architecture and urban social policy. 

    Worpole was a founding associate of Demos. He served on the UK Government's Urban Green Spaces Task Force, and is an adviser to CABE and the Heritage Lottery Fund.

    He was recently appointed Professor at the Cities Institute, London Metropolitan University. His most recent books include 350 Miles: An Essex Journey with photographer Jason Orton, and Last Landscapes: the architecture of the cemetery in the West.

    Ken Worpole has his own web site at http://www.worpole.net

  • Dr. Alan Barber Dr. Alan Barber

    Dr. Alan Barber is a freelance consultant specialising in urban greenspace strategies.

    He trained at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and was Deputy Parks Manager and then Parks Manager for Bristol City Council for 21 years, from 1971 to 1992..

    Dr. Barber moved into consultancy in 1992, and has lectured widely. He is currently Simon Research Fellow at the University of Manchester. 

    He was an expert adviser to the Heritage Lottery Fund, helping to set up the first Urban Parks Programme.  He has been a commissioner for CABE Space and a member of the Government's Urban Green Spaces Taskforce.

    Dr. Barber was a founding member of the Urban Parks Forum, now GreenSpace. 

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    thumb_sr_richmond_castle_230w‘Dales Plants and Gardens 1900-1960’ is a volunteer-run oral history project, which began in October 2007. They are recording people's memories of food plants gathered and grown during the first half of the  20th century in Swaledale, Arkengarthdale and Wensleydale.

    Volunteer Sally Reckert writes about the methodology that they have developed for the project to research and record the small gardens and allotments.

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  • The Backhouse Nursery of York 1815 - 1955

    Detail of Chassereau's 1766 map of York, showing the Friar's Gardens. Image ccourtesy of York City Library.The history of this once-famous Yorkshire nursery and its owners encapsulates many aspects of British culture and economics over a period of 200 years.

    The founders were born in the 18th century and came from a widely connected Northern English Quaker family amongst whom were many keen botanists. In the 19th century the nursery was famous in Britain and abroad as suppliers of trees, garden plants and seeds.

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    Many of the landscapes that they inspired or created can still be enjoyed today, and where they have disappeared their historic legacy lives on.

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