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A Natural History of Gardening 1650–1800

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  • Jun 16, 2015 
    440 p., 10 1/4 x 11 1/2 
    300 color + 100 b/w illus.
    ISBN: 9780300196368
    Cloth: $75.00 

A Natural History of English Gardening

1650–1800

  • Mark Laird
Winner of the 2013 David R. Coffin Publication Grant, given by the Foundation for Landscape Studies.
Inspired by the pioneering naturalist Gilbert White, who viewed natural history as the common study of cultural and natural communities, Mark Laird unearths forgotten historical data to reveal the complex visual cultures of early modern gardening. Ranging from climate studies to the study of a butterfly’s life cycle, this original and fascinating book examines the scientific quest for order in nature as an offshoot of ordering the garden and field. Laird follows a broad series of chronological events—from the Little Ice Age winter of 1683 to the drought summer of the volcanic 1783—to probe the nature of gardening and husbandry, the role of amateurs in scientific disciplines, and the contribution of women as gardener-naturalists. Illustrated by a stunning wealth of visual and literary materials—paintings, engravings, poetry, essays, and letters, as well as prosaic household accounts and nursery bills—Laird fundamentally transforms our understanding of the English landscape garden as a powerful cultural expression.
Mark Laird is a historic landscape consultant and garden conservator and teaches landscape history at the Graduate School of Design, Harvard University. Previous books include The Flowering of the Landscape Garden: English Pleasure Grounds, 1720–1800 and Mrs. Delany and Her Circle (Yale).







Temple Flower Garden of Richard Bateman’s Grove House, Old Windsor, Berkshire, 1730s, Anonymous.
Photo: Courtesy of Yale University Press




Mark Laird’s A Natural History of Gardening (Yale University Press, $75) is one of those books that would look swell on a cocktail table: impressively hefty, eye-catchingly colorful. Its cover is a romantic enticement par excellence, all spotted moths, butterflies, and Sweet Williams the color of raspberry jam, a bit like the chintz pattern you’ve been looking for your entire life but have been unable to find.

Actually, the enticing flora and fauna come from a 1769 English watercolor that takes up the whole of page 208, and they are joined by hundreds of other period illustrations that explore gardening as it was done, pondered, examined, painted, recorded, and scientifically advanced in the 17th and 18th centuries, a time when England was flooded with explorers bringing back exotic plants from distant shores.





Interior of the Leverian Museum: View As It Appeared in the 1780s, Sarah Stone.
Photo: Courtesy of the British Museum


A mournful-looking moose in a wooded landscape—painted by George Stubbs in 1770, more famous for his portraits of champion horses—finds a home here, recalling the menagerie assembled by a duke. So does a 1665 engraving of a dissected blue fly (an example of what Laird calls the “wonderment of nature’s microscopic construction”), an early 18th-century depiction of convolvulus sturdily staked with bamboo (the image “shows how exotics were used in flower borders”), landscape plans of country estates, an 1808 aquatint illustrating garden staff at their labors (including pulling a lawn roller), and collages by Mrs. Delany, an infernally active 18th-century widow whose paper flower collages fascinated a generation of aristocrats.




Citron with a Moth and Harlequin Beetle, circa 1701–02, Maria Sibylla Merian.
Photo: Courtesy of the British Museum


For people who might have little interest in the subject, the absorbing illustrations support an unexpectedly engrossing text. Laird divertingly explores the dramatic lives of the great and often pioneering gardeners of the day, from the prickly Dowager Duchess of Beaufort, an important patron of the horticultural arts, to amateur entomologist Eleanor Glanville, whose her family attempted to steal her fortune by equating her passion for butterflies with mental illness. Artists are illuminated, as are the publishers who answered the public’s hunger to learn more about the most extraordinary flowers and their cultivators; so too the rise of the landscape gardener as a profession and the inevitable competitions between noblemen that were sparked as gardens became prideful trophies rather than merely escapist pleasances.




Mark Laird’s A Natural History of Gardening.
Photo: Courtesy of Yale University Press


A Natural History of English Gardening is not a how-do guide though it is filled with inspiration. I, for one, dream of building a lidded “seed trough” (basically a bird feeder) like the fetching elevated one John Evelyn created for his magical and now vanished garden at Sayes Court in Deptford—and I’m fully in accord with Mary Beaufort in her passion for striped flowers, like the beloved auriculas she nurtured along with a staggering number of other species from around the world (she was hugely fond of American plants). Laird’s book is filled with the kind of information that will blossom in your mind as you deadhead or weed, linking your own speck of the planet to the long ago and the far away.

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