Daily Archives: May 6, 2022


Thursday, May 12, 5:00 pm – The Nineteenth Century Garden: James Shirley Hibberd, Online

This Gardens Trust talk on May 12 is the third in our 2nd series on Victorian Gardens on Thursdays @ 10.00 GMT. £5 each or all 6 for £30. Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and again a few hours before the talk. A link to the recorded session (available for 1 week) will be sent shortly afterwards. Register through Eventbrite HERE.

James Shirley Hibberd (1825 – 1890) has been called ‘the father of amateur gardening’. He wrote for those he called ‘plain people’ – those who had a town garden or a suburban garden that they looked after themselves It is through his writings that we get a vivid idea of what ordinary Victorian gardens were like.

He wrote books, he edited two magazines simultaneously and started a third towards the end of his life, he lectured all over the country on a wide range of subjects, he was a judge at horticultural shows, he chaired committees and celebratory dinners at which he was always called on to make a speech. Eventually he was involved with improvements at Kew and at the RHS Chiswick Gardens and was advising the Government on possible ways to deal with potato disease.

He deserves to be better known. Lecturer Julia Matheson says ‘All my life I have lived in a mid-Victorian suburban semi not far from London. I had always wanted to know what might have been in my own garden when the first owners lived there, and once I had retired I had time to look into the subject. My start in research began at the Garden History Society’s summer school at Ashridge, and my enthusiasm grew until I studied for an M.A. at the Open University with a dissertation on 19th century working class flower shows in London. Not content to stop there, I went on to a Ph.D. with a thesis on East End horticulture 1840-1900. It was in the course of this research that I first encountered Shirley Hibberd – who is now my Number One Gardening Hero’.


Sunday, September 11 – Sunday, September 18 – The Regal Estates & Jacobean Manors of Norfolk and Suffolk

A defining period of British history and culture; for the first time Scotland, Wales and England were united under one monarch, the Jacobean era left its indelible mark on many of England’s historic houses. The Jacobean style can be characterized by flamboyant design and extravagant detailing both inside and out. From the unique architectural style of Ickworth to the sumptuous interiors of Blickling Hall, we discover the homes of Britain’s aristocracy while also exploring the historic cities of Cambridge and Norwich, which flourished during this period. This Royal Oak Foundation Tour, in association with the National Trust for Historic Preservation and Albion Tours, will take a splendid one week trip to England this September.

Special extras included in your itinerary
• Guided walking tour of Cambridge
• High tea at Sandringham
• Guided gardens tour at Blickling Hall
• Guided tour of Ickworth House
• Guided walking tour of Flatford
• Introductory talk at the Guildhall of Corpus Christi, Lavenham
• Exclusive out-of-hours Champagne guided tour of Hatfield House including champagne greeting, a two-hour guide and complimentary guidebook
• Themed evening talk by a guest speaker

There will be gardens, fabulous gardens. Sandringham’s mostly informal gardens include woodland walks, rockeries, magnificent sweeping lawns, lakes and streams and the more formal North Garden. Ickworth’s impressive Italianate garden mirrors the house architecture, with box hedges and Mediterranean planting plus a Victorian stumpery planted with shade-loving ferns. You will roam the Suffolk countryside with a guided walk to discover the locations immortalized by John Constable’s most famous paintings; created around the hamlet of Flatford in the heart of beautiful Dedham Vale. You will continue on to The Vyne, a splendid Tudor red-brick mansion set in 13 acres of attractive gardens. For complete itinerary and hotel information, visit www.albionjourneys.com

Ickworth House Gardens