GHS News 86 Summer 2010 3 GHS Events 2010 and Beyond…

GHS News 86 Summer 2010 3 GHS Events 2010 and Beyond…

THE GA R DEN NEwS HISTO R Y SOCIETY SummER 2010 86 events conservation agenda forum news contents news 4 GHS events 2010 and beyond… 4 conservation notes: England 9 2010 GHS Essay Prize conservation notes: Scotland 10 our new vice-President 12 agenda monrepos Park, Vyborg, Russia 14 The London Geodiversity Project 17 Geodiversity in Scotland 18 Fruit Collections at Brogdale, Kent 20 Bee Boles: an update 21 Parks and Gardens UK 23 Reflections on Water: report 23 wKGN International Forum 2009: report 24 The gardens of Persia: report 25 Paxton House, Berwickshire: a report 27 Chloe Bennett Digitising Gilpin’s 1772 Painshill sketchbook 29 Impressionist Gardens: review 29 Dominic Cole & Lucy Lambton with winner Laura Meyer other events 31 forum Tunduru Botanical Garden 36 In a year which has seen the demise of several key Accessible gardens 36 Garden history courses it is perhaps ironic that Country House and Greenhouses 36 this year’s Annual Essay Competition had many Pyramids 36 more entries than ever before and the standard was A new MA in Garden History? 36 consistently high. After some heated debate the Design a new garden for Astley Castle 37 judges finally agreed on a Winner, with a ‘Highly Courses at Cambridge 37 Commended’ and ‘Special Mention’ certificates Bushy Park Water Gardens 37 also being awarded. The winner receives a year’s Garden History mentioned on TV! 38 The English Gardening School relocates 38 subscription to The Society and a cheque for ‘monster Work’ 38 £250. The prizes were presented by our President what a difference a year makes… 38 Lucinda Lambton at the annual Summer Party at principal officers 39 London’s Geffrey Museum. GHS events diary 40 The winner was Laura Meyer, a PhD student at Bristol University. Her winning essay, Landscape as Legacy explores the influence of Elizabeth Percy, contact us membership: applications to The Garden History Society, 47 Water Street, www.gardenhistorysociety.org Lavenham, Sudbury, Suffolk, CO10 9RN tel: 01787 249 286 The Garden History Society Head Office email: [email protected] 70 Cowcross Street, London EC1M 6EJ tel: 020 7608 2409 Front cover: A first trial attempt at recreating John fax: 020 7490 2974 Fleming’s 1850s summer bedding schemes at email: [email protected] Cliveden, May 2010. The full recreation will come to fruition in the next few years; the two great The Garden History Society in Scotland Sutherland gardens at Trentham and Cliveden are The Glasite Meeting House, both undergoing revival, though in very different ways. 33 Barony Street, Edinburgh, EH3 6NX tel/fax: 0131 557 5717 Copy deadlines: email: scotland@)gardenhistorysociety.org for micro-news 86a — 10 November for GHS NEWS 87 — 1 Febrary 2011 news 1st Duchess of Northumberland, on the gardens usual before the 2011 AGM. The principal items at Alnwick. Meyer presents Percy as the force of business can be summarised as follows: behind the Gothic elements in the garden and Lady Lucinda Lambton was re-elected as the wider estate. By revealing Percy’s influence President of the Society for a further one year. on one of the country’s earliest and largest essays Robert Peel, Chairman of the Events Committee in the Gothic Revival, it presents Percy as a keen was re-elected to the Council for a further four- antiquarian and a hitherto largely overlooked year term. shaper of eighteenth-century taste. The judges Edward Fawcett was elected as a Vice-President were particularly impressed with the way Meyer of the Society for five years. engaged with the landscape itself, combining an John Sales was re-elected as a Vice-President of intimate understanding of the site with a scholarly the Society for a further five-year term. analysis of the archival material. The writing is Mavis Batey, Sir Richard Carew Pole, Ray lively and engaging, and brings convincing new Desmond, The Dowager Marchioness of Salisbury, evidence to bear on this key British site. Tim Smit and Dr Christopher Thacker were Sally O’Halloran from Sheffield University was re-elected as Vice-Presidents of the Society for life. Highly Commended for Keeping the Gardens at They had all been elected as Vice-Presidents in Knole, which explores the role of gardeners in the 2002 but the minutes did not mention for how design and management of Knole from 1622–1711. long they were to hold office. Since 2004 all Vice- Where most garden history is concerned with Presidents have been elected for a five-year term. the garden owners and their interests, this essay The Council proposed that the position should be redresses the balance, demonstrating the range of clarified and that all should hold office for life and expert knowledge possessed by C17 and early C18 this was agreed by the members of the Society. gardeners and reassessing the importance of these elizabeth Cairns key workers. It is fast paced, scholarly and makes excellent use of the source material. Honorary Treasurer Daniel Glass, from Birkbeck College, received At the AGM in July Colin Ellis announced that a Special Mention for his Once Upon a Time in he will be retiring as Honorary Treasurer of the Mexico, which explores Frida Kahlo’s horticultural Society with effect from the end of the year. We efforts at La Casa Azul. Presenting horticulture as are therefore looking for a replacement. Anyone simply another expression of the artist’s work, it who is interested in taking on this position should demonstrates how Kahlo’s garden reveals the visual please contact the Administrator by email: motifs and dominant themes of the rest of her art; [email protected] or by post: her defiance in the presence of extreme pain, her 70 Cowcross Street, London EC1M 6EJ love of nature and her celebration of Mexico’s people, history and culture. This vibrant essay was given Special Mention because of the imaginative college lecture series, ongoing way it engages with the contemporary world proving that garden history doesn’t end with the Underlining its continuing commitment to eighteenth century! education and the dissemination of information Details of next year’s competition will be posted on the wide and diverse topic of garden in the autumn, but meanwhile congratulations to history the Society is pleased to announce a all this year’s entrants, many of whom have been continuation of our series of College Lectures. invited to submit their entries to the Society’s Aimed at students of horticulture, landscape Journal for possible publication. architecture, garden design, conservation and Katie Campbell, Chair of Judges garden history, specialist speakers are available to give a lecture on a wide range of issues AGM Report from the Hon. Secretary free of charge in any bona-fide educational The Annual General Meeting of the Society establishment. was held on Friday 2 July 2010 at Ancaster Hall, For further details please contact our Nottingham University. 68 members attended. The Administrator as above. minutes of the AGM will be sent to members as GHS NewS 86 Summer 2010 3 GHS events 2010 and beyond… Visit to Brogdale and Doddington Place near Stafford. An introductory talk will be Gardens, Kent followed by lunch (in part grown in the restored Thursday 7 October walled garden). To be followed by a tour of the restoration work in the walled garden and an In the morning we will be going to Brogdale exploration of the ferme ornée, where David has Farm. Dr Joan Morgan, pomologist and fruit been re-planting the hedges (see last issue and also historian, will take us on a guided tour of the Garden History 9:1 Spring 1981 p26). orchards and Tom La Dell, a director of Brogdale Cost: £29. Send cheque with Booking Form Collections that now runs the public access to the & SAE to: Pamela Paterson, 25 Jermyn Street, fruit collection, will give a short talk (see page 20). London SW1Y 6HR, tel: 020 7434 0021 or email: [email protected] Stafford is just over an hour from London by train (suggested travel by train departs Euston 10.07am, arrives Stafford 11.22am. We will organise a mini-bus if there are enough takers). Return to Chiswick 2pm, Tuesday 19 October In association with the London Parks and Gardens Trust, there will be another opportunity to explore the recently restored landscape of Chiswick with David Jacques and Head Gardener Fiona Joan Morgan Crumley. Assemble by 2pm at the new cafe. Tea Part of the apple collection at Brogdale after the tours in either the cafe or the camellia house is included in the price. After lunch we will drive the short distance to Members: £15 (GHS &/or London Parks Doddington Place Gardens, noted for the cloud- and Gardens Trust), non-members: £18. For like yew hedges planted in the early-C20 century, further information and application forms, please the woodland garden and Wellingtonia walk, contact Robert Peel (with SAE), 34 Rodney the sunk garden, and rock garden with its series Court, London W9 1TH, Tel: 0207 121 8938 or of descending pools, the lowest and largest of preferably email: [email protected] which was restored in 2003. There will be a short introduction to the gardens by the Head Gardener. A Panorama of Parks Cost: £30 for GHS members and members of GHS/OuDCE joint study weekend the Kent Gardens Trust, £32 for non-members. at Rewley House, Oxford Also included is morning coffee and lunch at Friday 22 to Sunday 24 October Brogdale. For further information please contact Ruth Brownlow, email: [email protected], The weekend will consider the development or in writing to The Garden History Society, 70 of parks physically and conceptually over the Cowcross Street, London EC1M 6EJ (mark the centuries, from medieval to modern and private to envelope ‘Brogdale’ and include SAE).

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