Daily Archives: January 18, 2023


Monday, January 23, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm Eastern – Gardens of Peace: John Soane and Idyllic Paradise, Online

Many aspects of garden design were informed by experiments conducted in the 18th century. Mausolea and spaces of remembrance were toyed with by John Soane and his students to push their architectural potential. Images of these designs echo the grandeur of earlier times and sites be it monuments along the Via Delle Tombe in Pompeii or monuments of Palmyra in Syria.

Most of these designs were never built, yet their imprint on successive buildings and sites looms large in the architectural record, particularly in the 19th century cemeteries. Emulating the discovery many contemporary architects experienced as they journeyed on the Continent and further afield, Sheldon will assess some of these architectural sketches and how they would develop as the 18th century progressed.

£5 Register through the Gardens Trust and Eventbrite HERE. Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and a link to the recorded session (available for 1 week) will be sent shortly afterwards.

Sheldon K Goodman is a public historian, tour guide, heritage professional and founder of Cemetery Club, which seeks to show cemeteries as ‘Museums of People’ that are full of social history rather than as morbid, mournful spaces to be avoided. As a heritage communicator, he has worked with museums and other heritage spaces, including co-developing the first event to celebrate queer history in a historic cemetery (the first in the U.K) entitled ‘Queerly Departed’ for the Royal Parks, with successful sequels for Arnos Vale and Birmingham Jewellery Quarters Cemeteries Trust. He has also worked with the Brunel Museum, created visual content for Schools Out UK and has given talks at the National Archives and at the BBC. Sheldon is also a qualified City of Westminster guide and regularly leads walks around the British Museum and London’s pubs.


Tuesday, January 24, 10:00 am – 11:30 am GMT – Garden Archaeology: Baddesley Clinton, Online

This is the third series of Gardens Trust talks exploring how archaeology helps the garden historian find vital evidence on the ground which then informs future restoration projects and garden management plans. Our distinguished and popular speakers will be reporting mainly on current and on-going archaeology at various sites and with an emphasis on water features. £5 through Eventbrite. Register HERE. 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 will be sent shortly after each session and will be available for 1 week.

Work at Baddesley Clinton began early in 2022 to examine and appraise recent LiDAR coverage for the park. It revealed a number of new features including the sites of former fishponds and possible formal garden and moated mound. Further consideration of the sites on the ground and some new documentary material enabled a reassessment of the historic development of water management in the park and the suggestion made that the current ponds and canal north of the house are likely to be part of an early modern pleasure garden, in short a radical reappraisal of the entire landscape.

Dr. Stephen Wass is a researcher and has just completed his D. Phil. on the subject of seventeenth-century water gardens. In addition, he works as a commercial archaeologist. In this capacity most of his projects involve historic gardens and he is currently occupied with a series of archaeological investigations connected with the latest programme of restoration at Stowe Landscape Gardens near Buckingham. He is also working to set up a new research programme alongside the Oxfordshire Gardens Trust into the ‘lost’ Tudor and Jacobean gardens in the county.