Gardens in the sky….

Royal Brough of Kensington and Chelsea Local Studies Library

Royal Brough of Kensington and Chelsea Local Studies Library

From the underground delights of cemeteries and burial plots of the last couple of posts to something more uplifting and airy!

One of things I like about researching anything but particularly gardens and their history is the way one can get so easily diverted by  endless possibilities and choices…. and very soon an afternoon that was intended to be devoted to tracking down a reference or a single piece of information has become an afternoon spent idly widening ones knowledge and finding another twenty things to research further next time!   That’s what happened to me recently when  I discovered this short piece of film footage whilst looking for something completely different….

that led to this…

and  this:

and then this:

5842024998_8bdc3cdab7_zand of course I got hooked, forgot my original project and spent the next few hours looking at roof gardens instead!

The Derry & Toms gardens were, of course, those constructed between 1936-1938 by Ralph Hancock, covering 0.6 hectares on the roof of the former Derry and Toms Department Store in Kensington High Street.The tripartite gardens (Spanish, English and Tudor) formed an integral part of the design concept of the building. Hancock had previously designed the Garden of the Nations at the Rockefeller Centre in New York.

Royal Brough of Kensington and Chelsea Local Studies Library

Royal Brough of Kensington and Chelsea Local Studies Library

 

Trevor Bowen's plaque in the gardens Tom Hannen, 2007

Trevor Bowen’s plaque in the gardens
Tom Hannen, 2007

The gardens were the idea of Trevor Bowen of Barkers of Kensington, the department store group which owned Derry & Toms, and he wanted them to outdo the roof gardens not only of Barkers themselves but those of their great rival Selfridges as well.    Derry & Toms closed in 1971 and the building briefly, but famously became the home of Biba.  It is now split up between several chain stores but the roof garden remains intact as a restaurant and club in Richard Branson’s empire.

More interestingly is that the garden is a thriving concern, runs a gardening club, has exhibited at Chelsea this year and is currently fundraising to build a children’s garden in Beirut.  More details on their blog:

http://vlog.virginlimitededition.com/category/blogs/the-roof-gardens/green-fingers

sunpavilionderrygardens

There is a short  history of the gardens on our database:

http://www.parksandgardens.org/places-and-people/site/2837/history

Ralph Hancock, from a flyer produced by Neath Port Talbot College PGDS 602

Ralph Hancock,
from a flyer produced by Neath Port Talbot College PGDS 602

I also discovered the informative and comprehensive website devoted to Ralph Hancock.  I’m ashamed to say  I had never heard of him until last week so I was quite taken aback by the range and quality of his work in both Britain and America.  The website illustrates many of his gardens and has good links to other film and video footage as well as radio and TV clips. It is well worth taking a long look.

http://www.ralphhancock.com

Hancock ‘s gardening ideas  are set out in When I make a Garden, published in 1935.

 

There are several other blogs which have detailed posts on aspects of the gardens so rather than “borrow” their material I’ve included links here.  I hope enjoy you enjoy meandering your way round them as much as I have. If you have access to back numbers of the RHS magazine The Garden then Ursula Buchan wrote an article about Hancock called “The Final Storey” in the October 1993 issue.

There are a lot of early black and white photos of the gardens in this blog from Kensington & Chelsea’s local studies library which covers the use of the gardens as a site in MichaeL Moorcock’s fiction:

https://rbkclocalstudies.wordpress.com/tag/derry-and-toms-roof-garden/

the 75th anniversary is covered in: http://universityofglasgowlibrary.wordpress.com/2013/09/20/derry-and-toms-roof-gardens/

and the BIBA days – 1971-1973 – are covered in:

Uriah, the Big Biba Roof garden Derry and Toms 1973.

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The Spanish Garden on the roof of the Derry and Toms Building in Kensington High Street. © English Heritage.NMR Reference Number: AA084998

The Spanish Garden on the roof of the Derry and Toms Building in Kensington High Street. © English Heritage.NMR
Reference Number: AA084998

The Tudor Garden on the roof of the Derry and Toms Building in Kensington High Street, 1971 © English Heritage.NMR Reference Number: AA084999

The Tudor Garden on the roof of the Derry and Toms Building in Kensington High Street, 1971
© English Heritage.NMR
Reference Number: AA084999

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John Claudius Loudon…and cemeteries continued

The tomb of Loudon's father in Pinner Churchyard . Image from ledgeoflondon.com/curiosities.html

The tomb of Loudon’s parents in Pinner Churchyard .
Image from http://www.knowledgeoflondon.com/curiosities.html

John Claudius Loudon had been fascinated by death and burial for many years before he began designing cemeteries.

His first, and probably most bizarre, work was the monument he designed for his parents’ grave in the churchyard of St John the Baptist’s church at Pinner in Middlesex.  It bears the inscription: “Sacred to the memory of William Loudon of the original stock of the Loudon family, of the parish and county of Midcalder. He died 29 December AD 1809. This monument, set up by John Claudius Loudon, the eldest of his sons, stands as a witness of his piety”.    Loudon’s mother, Agnes, died in 1841 and her inscription, on the other end of the coffin can be seen here:

The inscription to Agnes Loudon image from http://www.pjbartlett.co.uk/Pinner%20History.htm

The inscription to Agnes Loudon
image from http://www.pjbartlett.co.uk/Pinner%20History.htm

Local historian Walter Druett in Pinner in History [1937] records the folklore behind it: “Pinner churchyard contains a monument that is probably unique. It consists of a tall pyramid, through the middle of which protrudes a stone coffin. It was raised to the memory of William and Agnes Loudon whose bodies lie in the coffin. William Loudon and his wife inherited some money under a will which stipulated that they should receive a certain sum so long as their bodies were above the ground. By burying his parents above the ground, a son sought to keep a bequest in the family”.  In fact, they are more mundanely buried in a vault beneath.

Despite his evident interest Loudon does not seem to have been involved in the design of any of the great early 19thc cemeteries.  Indeed he only had 3 commissions and they all date somewhat ironically from the months immediately before his own death in 1843.

Alternative designs in Gothic and Italian style for the entrance lodges, from John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Alternative designs in Gothic and Italian style for the entrance lodges, at Histon Road from John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

The first was the small non-denominational  Histon Road Cemetery in Cambridge set up by a group of non-conformist businessmen who established  the Cambridge General Cemetery Company Ltd in 1842. Here Loudon worked with the architect Edward Buckton Lamb. His ideas, and detailed alternatives to them, were not merely submitted to the company but also used as an exemplar in his book On the Laying Out, Planting and Management of Cemeteries in 1843.

They cover everything from the site plan and the buildings right through the preparation of what we would now call a business plan for the cemetery. His calculations covered several pages of notes and included mortality rates, the types of burial and coffins to be allowed, and the depth of graves and vaults, as well as the costs of trees and shrubs in his planting schemes.

 

Histon Road Cemetery, Cambridge From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Histon Road Cemetery, Cambridge From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Histon Road Cemetery, Cambridge From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Histon Road Cemetery, Cambridge From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Histon Road Cemetery © Copyright Rob Noble & licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Licence

Histon Road Cemetery
© Copyright Rob Noble & licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Licence

Now closed,  it is cared for by Cambridge City Council working closely with the Friends of Histon Road Cemetery. As one of the best preserved examples of Loudon’s work the Cemetery is English Heritage grade II* listed.For more information take a look at our database entry and the website of the Friends of Histon Road Cemetery:

http://www.parksandgardens.org/places-and-people/site/1754

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Whilst Loudon was working on his designs for Cambridge his next cemetery commission –  an ‘overflow’ burial ground for Bath Abbey- arrived.

233053

From a drawing by C.P. Russell, Clerk to the Rectory of Bath,.c1850 http://www.bathintime.co.uk/image/233053/view-of-the-bath-abbey-cemetery-lyncombe-vale-1850

The new Bath  cemetery was to be nowhere near the Abbey itself. Instead, in line with contemporary practice, it was set out on a hillside on the rural fringes of the town.  Built in Anglo-Norman style by local contractors it did not open until 1844 after Loudon’s own death but  it still used his designs and embodied his  principles:  to dispose of the dead in a hygienic manner,  to improve the morals and taste of society, by its architectural quality and botanical riches, and to serve as a historical record for future generations. Loudon also said that the Cemetery should be conspicuous from a distance, be an ornament to the surrounding countryside and an impressive memento to mortality. Even today, perched high on a hill  it has wonderful views back over Bath. The cemetery continued to be used as a place of burial until 1995, when it was formally closed and handed over to the care of the Local Authority.

For more information see our database, the website of the abbey itself, or the  local community association:

http://www.parksandgardens.org/places-and-people/site/4/summary

http://www.widcombeassociation.org.uk/abbey.html

http://www.bathabbey.org/history/abbey-cemetery

The former non-conformist chapel at Southampton OLd Cemetery © Copyright Jim Champion and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence

The former non-conformist chapel at Southampton OLd Cemetery © Copyright Jim Champion and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence

His final commission, in every sense, was at Southampton. Although he was normally based in at his villa in Bayswater Loudon had been staying on the Isle of Wight whilst his wife , Jane Webb Loudon [of whom more at some point in the future] was writing another book. [She was almost as indefatigable as John Claudius himself]  The damp sea air aggravated his rheumatic fever and he decided to take temporary lodgings in Southampton to recover.  The local council had just received Parliamentary approval for a new cemetery on former common land and asked him to submit a design scheme, paying him £37 for it.  Loudon set to work and suggested amongst other things two chapels – one Anglican and one non-conformist – equal in size & side by side.  He then died before such scandalous ideas were rejected out of hand by the Bishop of Winchester.  After that alternative schemes were commissioned for much of the work from local contractors.

For more information see our database or the website of the Friends of Southampton Old Cemetery:

http://www.parksandgardens.org/places-and-people/site/3013

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Even though he was only responsible for the plans of three burial grounds – and they were only built in a substantially altered form – his importance for the design of Victorian cemeteries was immense.  The great semi-rural necropolis at Brookwood, as well as London’s Ilford Cemetery are amongst the best examples of this influence.

 

For a heavyweight discussion of his significance see:Peter Johnson, J.C.Loudon’s ideal cemetery which is downloadable at:

Click to access 4.3-modern-cemetery-pdf2.pdf

Unfortunately Loudon, despite his more than 4 million published words,  has largely been forgotten, probably because  as John Gloag suggests his ideas… ‘those bright oases of creative thought” got lost in “a huge grey desert of intolerable verbosity……..” [Gloag,  Mr Loudon’s England: The Life and Work of John Claudius Loudon, and his influence on architecture and furniture design, 1970].  Perhaps the time has come to resurrect him!

Bier

From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Finally…..the thing that has struck me most forcibly while researching the last couple of posts has been how much fascination there is for information about cemeteries, burials and death-related customs.  Here are just a few to get you going… but let us know if you find anymore that you think would be of interest to other readers.

http://www.derelictlondon.com/cemetery–churches.html

http://www.cemeteryfriends.org.uk

http://londoncemeteries.co.uk

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Pauper-funeral-500x349

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John Claudius Loudon…and cemeteries

From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

From John Claudius Loudon, On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Maybe it’s not the cheeriest of subjects but  as another birthday approached my thoughts turned to immortality – or rather the lack of it – and so I planned to write about some of the history of cemeteries and burial grounds, and more importantly how their use and value has changed so that, apart from their obvious use,  they have also become some of our most important historic parks and landscapes.

A measure of their significance, especially to the urban landscape, is that when I checked our database it gave me over 400 ‘hits’ ranging from Abbey Cemetery in Bath to the York Cemetery Trust.

Paradise Preserved English Heritage, 2002

Paradise Preserved
English Heritage, 2002

Of course, I should have known that somebody would already have done a simple and  succinct history of burial grounds and their changing role better:  in this case it was English Heritage in a well illustrated report called Paradise Preserved that was published in 2002.

It’s available as a free download at:

Click to access paradise_preserved_20081010174134.pdf

 

John Claudius Loudon, unknown artist, National Portrait Gallery

John Claudius Loudon, unknown artist, National Portrait Gallery

John Claudius Loudon, the great Victorian garden writer, designer and theorist, merits a lengthy mention in it because he was the first to write at length about cemetery design. That might sound a bit strange:  after all a cemetery is surely simply a place to bury our dead and shouldn’t require much designing.  In fact the layout and planting of cemeteries has been a matter of considerable debate since the 17th century.

John Evelyn, by Robert Walker, 1648, National Portrait Gallery

John Evelyn, by Robert Walker, 1648, National Portrait Gallery

John Evelyn, for example, argued “that there none so fitt places to bury in, than our Groves and Gardens, where our Graves may bedecked with…fragrant flowers… verdures, & perenniall plants, the most naturall Hieroglyphicks of our future Resurrection and Immortalitie; besides what they will conduce to meditation…and we might worthily declaime against our Custome of interring our dead in the body of our churches, as both undecent [&] unhealthy.” [Elysium Britannicum, p.157].

Sir Christopher WRen by Edward Pierce, Ashmolean Museum

Sir Christopher Wren
by Edward Pierce, Ashmolean Museum

Meanwhile his friend Christopher Wren suggested something much more formal. Burials should be “in Cemeteries seated in the Out-skirts of the Town… This being inclosed with a strong Brick Wall, and having a Walk round, and two cross Walks, decently planted with Yew-trees, the four Quarters may serve four Parishes, where the Dead need not be disturbed at the Pleasure of the Sexton, or piled four or five upon one another, or Bones thrown out to gain Room.” [Letter of advice to the Commissioners for Building Fifty New City Churches,  1711]

 

The Poor Man's Burial by Marcellus Laroon, 1687

The Poor Man’s Burial by Marcellus Laroon, 1687

Skull and crossbones from a tombstone in the Huguenot Burial Ground, Wandsworth http://londoncemeteries.co.uk

Skull and crossbones from a tombstone in the Huguenot Burial Ground, Wandsworth
http://londoncemeteries.co.uk

By the early 19th century most urban churchyards were a scandal.  Graves were constantly re-used, bodies not properly buried, bones often lying scattered around, and to make matters worse body-snatching was rife.   As the Penny Magazine of August 2nd 1832 noted: “There are many church-yards in which the soil has been raised by several feet above the level of the adjoining street by the continual accumulation of mortal matter; and there are others in which the ground is actually probed with a borer before a grave is opened! Many tons of human bones are sent each year from London to the north, where they are crushed in mills contrived for the purpose, and used as manure.”  See more on this at:

http://londoncemeteries.co.uk/2011/07/24/the-very-evil-custom-of-interring-the-dead-in-towns/#more-1663

For those of you interested in such things – which I suspect is most of us secretly – there is an excellent -and witty -analysis of 18th/19th century pauper burials in London by Jeremy Boulton.  Called “How to be duckfood” its available as a downloadable powerpoint presentation:      Howtobeduckfood

from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Parliament was driven to act. It legislated to  allow the construction of new burial grounds by both private companies and local authorities,  outside the built-up areas, and eventually closed many churchyards for further burials. And all the time the debate on the design of the new burial spaces was still raging.

But what had this got to do with Loudon?

In 1813 Loudon had undertaken an extraordinary journey.  In the midst of the Napoleonic wars, and in the immediate aftermath of the disastrous French retreat from Moscow he had set out to cross the continent and visited Poland, before going along the Baltic coast to  St Petersburg and then moving on to Moscow.  Apart from the obvious horrors of seeing countless unburied soldiers rotting in roadside ditches,  he explains in the Preface to On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries and on the Improvement of Churchyards which was eventually published in 1843, that…

Loudon.cemeteries.preface

As a result he  set down his own ideas in print, firstly in his own journal, The Gardener’s Magazine, and then in his book which is available to read or download at:

https://archive.org/stream/onlayingoutplan00loudgoog#page/n10/mode/1up

loudon.cem2

from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Loudon was a practical man with a great concern for efficiency, morality and ‘taste’.   His ideas for improving cemetery design were usually extremely down to earth [if that isn’t too awful a pun].

They included ‘burial boards’ [streamlined ways of getting coffins into the ground – &  if that intrigues you then see pp. 31-36 for more details], better drainage and ventilation systems [think about it],  the outsourcing of monument making from expensive city masons to those in rural and stone quarrying areas, and even more mundane things such as better ways of keeping records of burials in ledgers.

But for Loudon the practical went hand in hand with the aesthetic and he also suggested a range of ‘geometric’ layouts for burials,  as can be seen in this illustration from the book.  Planting was critical too: note his mention on the page shown above  of Abney Park in Hackney. This was  the first arboretum cemetery, laid out in the former 18thc landscape gardens of  two suburban villas, but when the cemetery was opened it  was according to Loudon, “highly ornamented” since it was planted out with virtually the entire content of Loddiges’ nursery catalogue. [Actually that’s hardly surprising since George Loddiges was a shareholder in the company and organised the planting].

The catacombs at Kensal Green © rayfrenshamworld.blogspot

The catacombs at Kensal Green © rayfrenshamworld.blogspot

pic_4

Warstone Lane Cemetery, Birmingham (Photo: Jonathan Lovie) from http://www.buildingconservation.com/articles/designed-landscapes/designed-landscapes.htm

But Loudon wasn’t content with making positive suggestions. He liked to ladle out the criticisms too and in his usual trenchant style.  For example he condemns the  “practice of exposing the coffins to view in catacombs” as “disgusting … and dangerous to the living” because of the “suffocating effects of the effluvia of decomposition”.  Amongst other unpleasant side effects – such as exploding bodies [see page 4 of the book for the macabre details] he thinks this is why grave diggers always have “pale and ghastly countenances.”   Burial in this manner – “the disgusting boxing up of dead bodies, in defiance of the laws of nature” is not “in good taste”, should be heavily taxed and not allowed under any place of public assembly.

Catacombs had become newly fashionable.  Our database lists 23 cemetery sites that had them, including Birmingham’s Warstone Lane, Anfield in Liverpool, Church Cemetery Nottingham and the General Cemeteries in Manchester, and Sheffield as well as most of the major London ones – Highgate, Abney Park, Brompton, Nunhead, Norwood and Kensal Green. Some were commercially successful while others like those in St Bartholomew’s Churchyard in Exeter were a financial disaster: there, only 11 burials took place in the grand Egyptian style vaults built into the hillside, out of the more than 17500 interments there during the century the burial ground was open.  It was as Loudon sharply notes”a serious drawback to the profits of the shareholders.”

The Catacombs, St Bartholomews Churchyard, Exeter © Copyright Chris Allen & licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Licence.

The Catacombs, St Bartholomews Churchyard, Exeter © Copyright Chris Allen & licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Licence. For more information see: http://www.exeter.gov.uk/index.aspx?articleid=1964

But it was not just catacombs that Loudon objected to. At Norwood, one of the earliest private cemeteries, designed by William Tite for the South Metropolitan Cemetery Company and opened in 1837, there were indeed spectacular catacombs set under the Anglican chapel.  They came complete with a silent hydraulic catafalque to lower the coffins through the chapel floor.  For images and more details including how to visit them see:

http://www.westnorwoodcemetery.com/under_cemetery/

If this wasn’t crime enough in Loudon’s eyes,  the 40 acres of grounds were laid out in a naturalistic style, with glades and groves of deciduous trees.

Loudon.cem4

from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

“It is too much in the style of a common pleasure-ground, both in regard to the disposition of trees and shrubs and the kinds planted.”  Loudon argued that the planting tree s in belts and clumps like this was wholly inappropriate because cemeteries do no\t “require shelter and shade; because nothing is more desirable as to have a free current of air and admit the drying influence of the sun; and because it is impracticable to form graves in clumps and belts.” Instead trees should be “scattered” singly to make the most efficient use of the land, and used to line the roadways so that shade was cast for mourners walking along them, or to form a “foreground to the scenery beyond”  He even objected to the deciduous trees used “since th.ey formed light-foliaged bulky heads” preferring instead “fastigiate conical dark needle-leaved evergreens [which] shade much less ground, produce much less litter when the leaves drop, and by associations, both ancient and modern are peculiarly adapted for cemeteries.”

Loudon.cem5

Loudon’s “Improvements” to Norwood Cemetery, from  On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

To make sure everyone understood he then published his own version of the cemetery company’s image. Leaving the foreground and distance untouched h.e confined his alterations to the main cemetery planting, changing deciduous trees for his preferred “dark-foliaged fastigiate and conical trees”.

Which do you prefer?  Are you a person of taste and judgement? And watch out what you think or you too will be subject to Loudon’s censure since… “We do not say that everyone who compares the two pictures will prefer ours to the others, because we do not allow everyone to be a judge in this matter, but we do expect that all will ackno|wldge there is a distinctive character in our view.”  He claims his approach is not only in keeping with contemporary continental design but also with the historical tradition of ‘the ancients’ who used trees like cypresses extensively in burial sites, and also of oriental cemeteries.  To reinforce the point he adds images of a Chinese cemetery, although strangely one named the Vale of Tempe which is a classical site in Thessaly!

Loudon.cem.china

from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

Instead he wanted cemeteries to be considered as gardens with walks laid out round them. They should either be planned like this in the first place, or existing churchyards and other burial places could be converted later.  His book gives examples of where this has been done, including rather exotic ones from Turkey and Persia,

The cemetery at Pera in Istanbul, from on the laying out of cemeteries, 1843

The cemetery at Pera in Istanbul, from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

 

The

TheCemetery at Hafiz in Persia , from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

but Loudon then suggests how it was possible to create walks even in a churchyard which had not originally been laid out in a planned way.

 

 

 

Loudon.cem.walks

from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

And of course Loudon tried to put his ideas into practice….but since I have already written 2000 words the pleasure of hearing about that will have to wait until next time.

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gas

Improved ventilation from Loudon’s On the Laying Out, Planting and Managing of Cemeteries, 1843

 

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SURPRISES IN SOUTHEND…a follow up

A few months ago I shared some photos and comments about the cliffside gardens at Southend, and asked if anyone knew any more about them.  Earlier this week I was sent a links to some old movie footage [thanks Donna] which should bring back memories of seaside holidays for many of us. Having watched it I just had to search for some more.

The first is a 1953 promotional film “The Best Place Under The Sun” which includes some shots of the gardens…

the second is  a potted history of Southend pier  but it also includes some images of the gardens in Victorian prints.

and next there are a few scenes from the 1970s, including some shots of Peter Pan’s Playground

and finally enjoy  the 1938 London pensioners outing to Southend…and the dancing in the seafront gardens!   Just the sort of thing I can see my grandparents and great aunts and uncles having done – although I can’t quite picture my gran in one of those wonderful hats – or showing her knees!  What a pity there was no sound recording.

More comments and links on Southend or any other posts would be very welcome.

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John Claudius Loudon…. and Greenhouse Technology

Its been a while since I wrote my last piece on Humphry Repton and I was thinking about a follow-up on the Picturesque when into my inbox  came a new post from Matthew Beckett’s excellent blog The Country Seat covering just that.   I’m not sure its  the done thing to recommend  a’rival’ blog but I’m going to anyway!  Take a look at: http://thecountryseat.org.uk/2014/05/26/purchasing-the-picturesque-hampton-court-and-lasborough-park-for-sale/

John Claudius Loudon, unknown artist, National Portrait Gallery

John Claudius Loudon, unknown artist, National Portrait Gallery

So instead I’m going to follow up Repton in a different way over the next couple of posts, by looking at some aspects of the man who assumed his mantle as the leading garden designer and theorist of the early 19thc: John Claudius Loudon.

Whilst  Repton had been the most prolific garden writer of the 18thc with a whole string of books on the theory and practice of landscape gardening, he was a mere childish scribbler when compared to Loudon who wrote encyclopedic tomes containing millions of words and thousands of illustrations.

Born in Scotland in 1783  you get some idea of what sort of man he was from a journal entry quoted by his wife later in his biography:  “I am now twenty years of age, and perhaps a third part of my life has passed away, and yet what have I done to benefit my fellow-men?”  Incidentally, we have a brief biography of Loudon on our database:

http://www.parksandgardens.org/places-and-people/person/847

He started writing young. His first works Observations on the Formation and Management of Useful and Ornamental Plantations    and Hints respecting the manner of laying out the grounds of the public squares in London’  were published in 1804 soon after he arrived in London where he was to live for the rest of his life.   On the title page of Observations was a quote from Francis Bacon which sums up Loudon’s approach to life and his work:  ‘Knowledge is Power’.

Loudon aimed to spread knowledge as widely as possible and he wrote seemingly ceaselessly all his life.  Of course this would all have been done in long hand…. the sheer physicality of the task [especially when you see the size of even one of his myriad publications] is mind-boggling.  In itself this would have been remarkable but it was all the more so since his right arm had to be amputated in 1825 following a botched operation.

Not only did he write but he also edited a whole range of periodicals, ranging from The Gardener’s Magazine and later The Gardener’s Gazette, to  The Magazine of Natural History and The Architectural Magazine.   Even the task of reading his work is daunting simply because of the size and scale of the undertaking.  Most of his books can be read on-line or are available as free downloads, and a good place to start is: http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Loudon%2C%20J.%20C.%20(John%20Claudius)%2C%201783-1843

And if this was not enough he was an artist, exhibiting at the Royal Academy in 1804 and being elected to the Royal Society of Arts, the following year at the age of just 22.

from A Short Treatise on Several Improvements, Recently Made in Hot-houses

from A Short Treatise on Several Improvements, Recently Made in Hot-houses

More importantly he was also a  designer and inventor. Fascinated by greenhouse technology he experimented with the layout and design of glass roofs and walls to maximise potential light. In 1805, at the age of just 22,  he published the 2 volumes of  A Short Treatise on Several Improvements Recently Made in Hot-Houses which includes an account of a new patented ‘Loudon’s hothouse furnace’.

This new invention was easily obtainable ‘for just £2.10s’ at ‘the Edinburgh Foundry or Mr Dalziel’s (cabinet makers), Chapel Street, London, on enquiring for Loudon’s Improved Hothouse Furnace, which words are printed upon the door of the furnace. The improved ash-pit door, made according to the figure given in plate I. and the grate, are had along the above furnace, and are included in with the price’.   John Claudius sounded as if he was a typical Victorian entrepreneur but sadly he was anything but that.

The following year saw  a two-volume 600 page Treatise on Forming, Improving, and Managing Country Residences  which included a section on the design of pineapple houses.

loudon.treatise.pinehouse

He enlarged on this in 1823 in  The Different Modes of Cultivating the Pine-Apple.

Loudon’s most significant invention was a method of making glazing bars in wrought iron that could be made in curvilinear sections. The big breakthrough was to make them flexible enough to be bent in any direction without reducing their strength.  Suddenly curvilinear or even conical glazing was possible and the great age of glasshouses and conservatories was born.

from Loudon's Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, published in London in 1817.

from Loudon’s Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, 1817.

 

from Loudon's Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, published in London in 1817.

from Loudon’s Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, 1817.

from Loudon's Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, published in London in 1817.

from Loudon’s Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses,  1817.

 

 

from Loudon's Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, published in London in 1817.

from Loudon’s Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, 1817.

This led to the publication of  Remarks on the Construction of Hot-Houses in 1817 and in 1818 A Comparative View of the Common and Curvilinear Mode of Roofing Hot-Houses and Sketches of Curvilinear Hot-Houses.

 

 

 

 

 

 

from Loudon's Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, published in London in 1817.

from Loudon’s Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, 1817.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Unfortunately he sold the idea for the glazing bar  to  Messrs W. and D. Bailey of Holborn at an early stage.  They patented it in 1818 and so Loudon did not reap any financial reward from his invention, which is a pity since he was, despite all his publication, on the edge of bankruptcy much of his life.

from Loudon's Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses, published in London in 1817.

from Loudon’s Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses,  1817.

Loudon collaborated with Baileys on a number of glasshouses in the following years. including Felton Park in Northumberland.  Unfortunately we don’t have an entry on our database for Felton so if anyone knows anything about it please get in touch.  A recent report by English Heritage suggests that the greenhouse there, to a design by Loudon,  was supplied in kit form, then erected on site by Baileys but glazed by one of the many local glass manufacturers. A copy of the report can be downloaded at :

Click to access 005_2013WEB.pdf

Unoccupied greenhouse of circa 1830 that incorporates an C18 garden wall. In very bad condition. English Heritage offered a grant in August 2011 to allow a repair scheme to be drawn up. Funding to allow repairs to be undertaken is being explored. http://risk.english-heritage.org.uk/register.aspx?id=46382&rt=1&pn=2&st=a&ua=Northumberland+(UA)&ctype=all&crit=

Greenhouse at Felton Park, Northumberland which incorporates an C18 garden wall. 
http://risk.english-heritage.org.uk/register.aspx?id=46382&rt=1&pn=2&st=a&ua=Northumberland+(UA)&ctype=all&crit=

Later in 1824 Loudon published  The Green-House Companion advising readers on what plants to grow in their new structures, because of course, ‘the management of plants in a free-house requires a higher degree of knowledge than is called for in the management of the open garden…and the object of the Green-House Companion is to supply what is wanting in that respect.’  Loudon also published a large number of detailed plant reference books often using information supplied by John Lindley, secretary of the Horticultural Society of London, and the first professor of botany at London University. Loudon.GreenComp1

 

In it, Loudon points out that ‘a greenhouse which fifty years ago was a luxury not often to be met with, is now become an appendage to every villa, and to many town residences…and which mankind recognises as a mark of elegant and refined enjoyment.’

He lived up to his claims when designing a new house for himself, and his  villa at 3 Porchester Terrace, Bayswater, [which now has a blue plaque] has an impressive glass domed entrance /conservatory which can still be seen.

Loudon's villa at 3 Porchester Terrace, Bayswater. http://www.knowledgeoflondon.com/loudon.html

Loudon’s villa at 3 Porchester Terrace, Bayswater.
http://www.knowledgeoflondon.com/loudon.html

 

 

 

 

 

Other glasshouses with Loudon connections include Bicton Park near Exmouth in Devon, which looks remarkably like the designs in Remarks on the Construction of Hothouses shown above. Probably built in the early 1820s the enormous dome is unsupported and the structure is held together by simple pressure and Loudon’s glazing bar. There is an interesting commentary on Bicton  by Candida Lycett Green at:

http://www.candidalycettgreen.co.uk/live/journalism/unwrecked-england-the-palm-house-bicton-devon/

and we have a database entry on Bicton and its history at:

http://www.parksandgardens.org/places-and-people/site/403/summary

Another of Loudon’s major projects was  his design for the layout of Birmingham Botanical Gardens which opened in 1832. He included plans for a massive three-storey circular glasshouse within a wrought-iron framework. Sadly this was rejected by the committee in favour of a simpler arrangement that was replaced later in the century.

gardens-1855_sm

The simpler design chosen instead of Loudon’s grand glasshouse, in a painting of 1855 http://www.birminghambotanicalgardens.org.uk/gardens/history/gardens-and-buildings

Loudon was dismissive of this:  ‘ This range, taking it altogether, is one of the worst in point of taste that we know of. The centre is semicircular in the front part of the plan, with a lofty dome, sur mounted by a second small dome, cupola, or glass turret, not unlike in form to those sometimes put up on the roofs of offices for pigeons, and totally unfit for plants ; unless we suppose that the spiry top of an Araucaria imbricata could be induced to rise into it; while the two sides or wings, joined to this curvilinear centre are common shed-roofed structures, not half the height of the dome. The want of harmony between the centre and the wings is most conspicuous, from whatever direction the whole may be viewed, and in our eyes it is most offensive….. we dislike exceedingly the idea of having our name associated in any degree, however slight, with a garden which, though it might have been one of the most perfect in its kind existing any where, and altogether unique in some of its arrangements, is now bungled, and never likely to reflect credit on any one connected with it.’  (Gardeners Magazine (August 1839, p.456).For more information on Loudon’s original design see Georg Kohlmaier, Houses of Glass: A Nineteenth Century Building Type (MIT Press, 1986).

And with that typically direct put-down I’ll leave Loudon for today, but will return soon with some of his ideas for another great Victorian institution – the cemetery.

from Loudon's Sketches for Curvilinear Hothouses, 1818 British Library

from Loudon’s Sketches for Curvilinear Hothouses, 1818
British Library

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