
Edward William Cooke
by John & Charles Watkins
carte-de-visite, mid-late 1860s, National Portrait Gallery
So said John Ruskin of Edward Cooke who was mentioned in the post of May 2nd about Stumperies.
Ruskin—a fellow enthusiast for the natural sciences—went on to say that Cooke was ” full of accurate and valuable knowledge in natural history with which he is always overflowing at the wrong times’
Cooke designed gardens that put rockwork, rootwork, and ferneries firmly on the Victorian horticultural agenda. But he was more than just a gardener. He was also a painter of some note, but, not as you might expect, for his botanical art or landscape painting, but for his marine pictures and seascapes.
Read on to find out more about him and his various careers and discover some of the gardens he was involved with, …..





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