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Some
of the personalities responsible for the introduction of garden
worthy plants in Gloucestershire. Garden plants don't just
happen; they are usually the work of a keen hybridiser, a
selection made by an eagle-eyed garden owner or nurseryman,
or are newly introduced from the wild. The details below were
put together by John & Daphne Chappell of Cinderdine,
Dymock, near Newent.
E
B Anderson
(1895-1971)

E
B Anderson was past president of the Alpine Garden Society
and a skilled grower of dwarf bulbs and alpine plants. He
created the last of his seven gardens at Lower Slaughter in
Gloucestershire in 1961. From here he introduced Iris
'Katharine Hodgkin' and wrote several books on rock gardening.
The name Bertram Anderson lives on in a popular golden-leafed
thyme, a narrow-leaved Pulmonaria, and a handsome,
dark-leaved Sedum.
James
Atkins
(1802-1884)
Nurseryman
of Northamptonshire, in partnership with Jeyes (of Jeyes Fluid
fame) specialised in alpines. He retired to Painswick in 1871
where he pursued his gardening interests. Exchanged plants
with Kew, travelled and collected plants.
John
Banister
(1650-1692)
John
Banister was born in Tigworth in 1650. After receiving a Master
of Arts degree at Oxford in 1674 he spent four years botanising
in Oxford and arrived in Virginia in 1678. He was to spend
the rest of his life collecting and recording plants and insects
in Virginia and sending plants to England. He was accidentally
shot while botanising in 1692. The genus Banisteriaa
tropical family of trees and shrubs is named in his honour.
Henry
Nicholson Ellacombe
(1822-1916)
Gardened
at Bicton Rectory (now in Avon)as did his father before
himhe gathered plants from many sources. The garden
became famous for the wide range of plants which grew there
and he was highly respected by all contemporary gardeners.
Exchanged plants with Kew and supplied many for illustrations
in the Botanical magazine. Author of In a Gloucestershire
Garden.
Joe
Elliot (1915-1998)
Trained
at The Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, he started Broadwell
Nursery in 1946 specialising in alpines and other unusual
hardy plants. Member of the councils of the RHS and the AGS
and author of Alpines in Sinks and Troughs. He is now
retired from the nursery trade.
Henry
John Elwes
(1846-1922)

Ornithologist,
lepidopterist and plant collector, he combined all these interests
in his many travels. He was inspired by James Atkins of Painswick
to collect and care for plants. He created at Colesbourne
a garden from which no less than one hundred subjects were
supplied for plates and descriptions in the Botanical Magazine,
a feat no other garden has approached. Henry travelled to
all the bulb-producing countries of the world bringing back
some of our favourite spring flowering garden plants. Galanthus
elwesii, the snowdrop he found in the mountains of Turkey
in 1874, honours his name. The Andean alpine bulb, Hippeastrum
elwesii, which he brought from Chile in 1906 is seldom
grown today. In 1880 he wrote a Monograph of the Genus
Lilium which remains the authoritative work on that subject.
Along with Dr. Augustine Henry he wrote The Trees of Great
Britain and Ireland.
T
J English
Long
established firm of nurserymen and rose growers, breeding
and exhibiting roses mainly between the wars. Still trading
at Stanborough near Coombe Hill.
Mark
Fenwick
(1860-1945)
Described
as 'the best all round amateur gardener', he wrote many papers
on horticultural subjects. Created a super garden 'Abbotswood'
at Lower Swell near Stow on the Wold, listed by English Heritage
as Grade II. Sometimes open to the public.
Giant
Snowdrop Company
Began
trading from the garden created by the late Walter Butt. Rekindled
a waning interest in Snowdrops and were undoubted responsible
for saving many of the oldest garden hybrids from oblivion.
Unfortunately the company ceased trading due to the owner's
ill health.
Sir
George Holford
(1860-1926)
Sir
George Holford developed the famous Arboretum at Westonbirt,
founded by his father R S Holford. Sir George became a leading
orchid hybridist and on his death his celebrated collection
was acquired by his orchid foreman HG Alexander, who turned
it into a commercial enterprise.
Lawrence
Johnston
(1871-1938)

Lawrence
arrived at Hidcote in 1907 and was to create what is now one
of the most famous gardens in the world. Johnston's informal
planting within formal design was to lead the way for many
of the great twentieth century gardens that followed. His
plant-hunting trips led to the introduction of the popular
house plant Jasminum polyanthum AGM. His name is commemorated
in a scarlet verbena and a sweet-smelling yellow rose, whilst
the name 'Hidcote' has been applied to almost two dozen plants
found there.
Major
H P Leschallas
(1881-1946)

The
Major began gardening in 1911 and was one of the first to
perfect the technique of growing rare alpines in the open
at his garden 'Whitehill', Prestbury, near Cheltenham. His
book The Small Alpine Garden, issued in two parts,
describes his years of experiment and experience to the benefit
of future generations of alpine gardeners. Dianthus
'Whitehill' AGM and Saxifraga 'Whitehill', which he
raised in the 1930's, are still available today.
Helen
Milford (1877-1940)

Helen
returned to her native South Africa in 1935 and 1938 to collect
plants for the small alpine nursery which she ran from her
home at Chedworth in the Cotswolds. The plants she collected
in the Drakensburg mountains proved hardy in Britain, hut
her death and the intervention of war meant they were overlooked
for many years. Two of the plants she introduced, Helichrysum
milfordiae AGM and Crassula milfordiae, were eventually
named in her honour.
George
Osmond (1907-1989)

George
trained at Wisley returning to his native Wickwar to run Archfield
Nursery for almost 60 years. A gardener of the old school,
he took a particular interest in heathers. Of two good Calluna
vulgaris cultivars raised by him in 1970, 'Wickwar Flame'
AGM is still widely grown today, whilst the cultivar 'Bunsall'
could be in danger of disappearing. Dianthus 'Inglestone',
raised in 1938, should be more widely grown to enhance its
chance of survival, as Dianthus 'Kingswood', introduced
in 1980, seems to have been lost.
Daniel
Prosser (1865-1951)
Born
in Barnwood, the family later moved to Stone, Falfield, where
the Rose growing became a commercial venture using stock obtained
from Tortworth Court. In 1884 he moved to Matson and the rose
grounds which were a mecca for rose lovers until his death
in 1951.
John
Sanday
A
Rose Nursery now in Avon but still trading.
Captain
G H Simpson-Hayward
(1875-1936)
Inherited
Icomb Place in 1898 and promptly created an extensive garden
growing a wide range of alpines and rare botanical specimens.
Played cricket for the MCC and collected plants on their overseas
tours. An artist, he painted butterflies and plants. Further
research will credit him with the introduction of more plants.
Mary
Somerset, Duchess of Beaufort
(1637-1714)
One
of the earliest of Britain's distinguished lady gardeners,
an enthusiastic horticulturist, devoting to her gardens at
Badmington and Chelsea a lavish and intelligent expenditure.
Very little is known about her personal life but it is known
that she cultivated a great number of rare plants in the stove
houses and gardens of Badmington. Unfortunately most of her
introductions were tender greenhouse plants. The genus Beaufortia
tender, Australian heath like shrubs, is named in her
honour.
Keith
Steadman
Has
been a keen gardener for over thirty years. On retirement
from business he took to propagating and selling some of his
rarer plants, which had become unobtainable. Now has a thriving
small nursery.
Ernest
Henry Wilson (1876-1930)
The E.H. Wilson Memorial Garden was opened
in Chipping Campden, Gloucester in 1984 and commemorates one
of the world's most prolific plant collectors. 'Chinese' Wilson,
as he became known, was born in Chipping Campden in 1876 and
introduced to cultivation over 1,200 plants. The garden, open
every day free of charge, is planted exclusively with Wilson's
introductions. These include the paper bark maple Acer
griseum AGM, and the plant for which he wished to be remembered,
the very beautiful Lilium regale AGM. His first voyage
to China in 1899 was to collect Davidia involucrata
for Veitch's nursery. From 1907 to 1910 he hunted chiefly
for the Arnold Arboretum, of which he became Curator.
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