A few days ago I visited two Georgian gardens on the banks of the Thames. One of them was Marble Hill, and the other Pope’s Grotto which I’ll write about next week.
Marble Hill is the last complete survivor of the elegant villas that bordered the Thames between Richmond and Hampton Court. The gardens were not quite so lucky as the house and the grounds have been a rather bland public park for over 120 years. But things are changing and thanks to English Heritage the highlights of the 18thc gardens are in the last stages of restoration and recreation. It is another of their very successful projects that has seen life breathed back into, amongst many others, Brodsworth, Wrest Park, Belsay Bolsover and Eltham Palace [all of which I’ve written about here].
While the newly recreated gardens at Marble Hill may not be immediately amongst the most spectacular they are going to offer an authentic insight into what the early/mid-Georgian garden was like and we should all be very grateful to the English Heritage garden team for their flair, determination and attention to detail.

Where can you…
A few days ago I visited a garden I’d known about for years, but because it’s only open two afternoons a year I’d never managed to visit. I’d seen images of its ponds and cascades, its red Japanese-style bridges and its flaming autumnal colours and so, undeterred by the heavy rain, I set off from north London to the far-flung south-western corner of the capital and the last remaining part of what used to be Coombe Wood Nursery, part of the Veitch horticultural empire.



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