The faithful pencil of Mrs Withers

 Fuschia Princess of Wales (Augusta Withers) -http://www.collectgbstamps.co.uk

Fuchsia ‘Princess of Wales’, by Augusta Withers  one of the 1997 range of 19thc flower painting stamps                             http://www.collectgbstamps.co.uk

The more I explore botanic art the more I realise how underestimated it has been as an art form, and the more I realise how underestimated botanical artists have been.  Of course part of the reason for that may well have been that many, if not the overwhelming majority, have been women. 

AUGUSTA INNES WITHERS (c.1793-1870) Tritoma Uvaria, Torch Lily or Red Hot Poker (1866English)

Tritoma uvaria, Torch Lily or Red Hot Poker (1866)

Our old friend John Claudius Loudon helps explain why: “to be able to draw Flowers botanically, and Fruit horticulturally, that is, with the characteristics by which varieties and sub varieties are distinguished, is one of the most useful accomplishments of young ladies of leisure, living in the country.” He then goes on: ” It is due to Mrs Withers of Grove Terrace, Lisson Grove, to state that her talents and teaching these objects are of the highest order.”   So who was this Mrs Withers?  What did she do to win Loudon’s praise? Why has she, like so many other  women artists of the time, virtually been forgotten?screenshot

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Snaths, nibs, chines & very sharp dengles…

barthélemy l'anglais, de proprietatibus rerum 1480 BNF Ms Francais 9140

Barthelemy l’Anglais, de proprietatibus rerum 1480 BNF Ms Francais 9140

No, its not an extract from a Frankie Howard or Kenneth Williams script [giving my age away there] but something to do with the traditional centrepiece of most English gardens: the lawn.

Nowadays its a relatively easy job to cut a lawn. We jump on our sit-on mower and ride up and down, or pull the rip-cord on the strimmer and stroll backwards and forwards until the job is done. But how were lawns managed in the days before such newfangled technology? The simple answer is either by grazing animals or by people holding nibs on the side of snaths [or sometimes sneads] which were fixed, by way of a tang, to a chine which had a very sharp dengle edge… or in plainer language… by scything.

You might assume that such a “primitive’ method of cutting meant lawns were relatively unkempt, with much longer grass compared with the close cropped stripey velvet look we are used to today. After all how surely a manually operated blade however sharp can’t compete with sophisticated machinery, but you’d probably be mistaken.

Where did the idea for having cut grass as part of the garden come from anyway? Read on to find out and to discover more about the ways in which the grass, lawns, turf, greensward and the sods in our gardens and parks were created and cared for in the past….

BNF Latin 12834, fol. 54v, Calendrier : juin

Bibliotheque National de France
Latin 12834, fol. 54v,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Tyntesfield: the guano palace

A stylised Peruvian booby bird - one source of guano - froma window at Tyntesfield. [Lesley Kinsley, 2013 from http://animalhistorymuseum.org]

A stylised Peruvian booby bird – one source of guano – from a window at Tyntesfield.
http://animalhistorymuseum.org

My posts on nightsoil and guano [from July 2015,] got picked up by an article in the Guardian online – fame indeed! So here’s a postscript about the house paid for by the vast fortune made by William Gibbs, the owner of the monopoly on exporting these valuable bird droppings from Peru. As the ditty of the time had it:

William Gibbs made his dibs

From the turds of foreign birds

William Gibbs, by Eugene Deveria, 1850 Tyntesfiled, NT

William Gibbs, by Eugene Deveria, 1850
Tyntesfield, NT

Guano netted him an immense fortune and he was probably  the richest commoner in England. Like many self-made men he invested in landed property to establish himself in society, and in his case it was  an estate – Tyntes Place – just outside Bristol in 1843. Renamed Tyntesfield it was never his principal residence – the family lived mainly at Hyde Park Gate in London – but it served as his base when he came to Bristol on business, and for holidays.

Gibbs might have been super-rich but the  vast mansion  was expensive to maintain and within a hundred years was falling into disrepair, before eventually being bought by the National Trust at auction in 2002.  Read on to discover more…. Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Artificial Stone 1: the projector, the architect, the thief and the formula

Artificial stone has apparently been around a long time. It wasn’t invented recently  by  jerry builders trying to copy the real thing on the cheap, or even by a prestigious company like Haddonstone, but probably by the Romans. However  not being a scientist or an engineer I hadn’t realised that something so seemingly simple a concept as artificial stone could be so complicated!

Most people connected with gardens and garden history will have heard of Coade Stone, the 18thc marvel that has proved more durable than real stone but there’s a whole lot more. So this is the first of a few posts as an attempt to tell the story of artificial stone and its use in gardens …

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Marks Hall

David Marsh, Oct 2015

David Marsh, Oct 2015

Normally I have a stack of posts waiting to be published, and if I think of a new idea it just joins the end of the queue. Today’s is an exception.

I visited Marks Hall in Essex this week and decided there and then that it had to take immediate priority in the hope that it will encourage you to visit to see the amazing autumn colours before the weather changes and the rest of the leaves fall!

Rhus typhinus, David Marsh Oct 2015

Rhus typhinus,
David Marsh Oct 2015

Read on to find out the story behind  this wonderful arboretum and walled garden set in the historic landscape of a now-demolished Jacobean mansion.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 1 Comment