Tag: Barbara Paul Robinson

  • Thursday, November 14, 2:00 pm Eastern – Gardening, A Love Story: Creating Brush Hill, Online

    Longtime Open Days Garden Host Barbara Paul Robinson will discuss her new book, Creating Brush Hill, the love story of Barbara and her husband, Charlie, and the garden they created together over five decades.

    Narrated by Barbara, it is the story of how two people of quite different temperaments and skills worked to create a place of great beauty. Brush Hill covers over ten acres of gardens, all created and tended by Barbara, as well as several garden features built by Charlie. Each year visitors and tour groups from near and far are welcome. Barbara makes clear that while they were busy creating this magical garden, the garden was working its magic on them. Full of wonders and frustrations of the garden, this delightful tale will appeal to serious gardeners, want-to-be-gardeners, and non-gardeners alike. Their ongoing love story offers inspiration, encouragement, honest and funny tales of garden mistakes and the demanding work that a garden entails, along with the garden’s many joys.

    This Garden Conservancy online talk will take place November 14 at 2 pm Eastern. $5 for members of the Garden Conservancy
    $15 for General Admission A recording of this webinar will be sent to all registrants a few days after the event. We encourage you to register, even if you cannot attend the live webinar.

  • Sunday, November 11, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Heroes of Horticulture: Americans Who Transformed the Landscape

    Author Barbara Paul Robinson will speak at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on November 11 from 1 – 2 on her new book Heroes of Horticulture: Americans Who Transformed the Landscape. Here are the vibrant stories of eighteen contemporary heroes of horticulture – institution builders, plant explorers and garden creators who have all had a major impact on the American landscape. Three of them established The Garden Conservancy. Others worked to revitalize and establish botanical and other exceptional public gardens. Some intrepid plant explorers (one with a Tower Hill connection) have even traveled to remote parts of the globe to bring back and disseminate plants unknown in the West. Over the course of their careers, these heroes have worked to preserve and enhance our public spaces, setting new standards for aesthetics and encouraging wider public participation. Whether you work the soil or not, you’ll read their stories with a sense of wonder and admiration, and there’s a good chance you’ll derive some practical horticultural benefits from their passion, their lives and their work.

    During a sabbatical from the leading international law firm, Debevoise & Plimpton where she was the first woman partner, Barbara Paul Robinson worked as a gardener for Rosemary Verey at Barnsley House. A hands-in-the-dirt gardener herself, she and her husband have created their own gardens at Brush Hill in northwestern Connecticut, featured in articles, books and television. Her first book was Rosemary Verey: The Life and Lessons of a Legendary Gardener (Godine 2012). A frequent speaker, Barbara has published articles in the New York Times, Horticulture, Fine Gardening and Hortus; she has also written a chapter in Rosemary Verey’s The Secret Garden.

    $10 for Tower Hill members, $20 for nonmembers. Register at www.towerhillbg.org.

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  • Saturday, September 8, 8:00 am – 6:00 pm – Hollister House Garden Study Weekend VIII Symposium: A Passion For Plants

    Be inspired by a day long symposium on Saturday, September 8 at Hollister House Garden, 300 Nettleton Hollow Road in Washington, Connecticut (the Berkshires) featuring:

    Sarah Price – one of Britain’s most prominent garden designers on Plants First
    Kelly Norris – award-winning plantsman and author on Planting on the Wild Side
    Lynden Miller – public garden designer on Beatrix Ferrand:Inspiration and Mentor
    Taylor Johnston and Ed Bowen – of Issima on The Cutting Garden Reimagined
    Barbara Paul Robinson – passionate gardener and author of Heroes of Horticulture
    Each reservation includes continental breakfast and lunch at the symposium and cocktails and preview buying at the Sale of Rare and Unusual Plants at Hollister House Garden.

    Visit  https://hollisterhousegarden.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/HHG_Garden-Study_VIII.pdf for event details.

    Patron $500 – includes invitation to the speaker dinner on Friday evening at Hollister House Garden and reserved seating at the symposium. ($200 of this ticket is a contribution to the HHG Education Fund and tax deductible)
    Friend $190 – Hollister House Garden and Garden Conservancy members
    Non-members $225

    If you must cancel your reservation please notify us as soon as possible so we may make your space available to others.  Register at https://hollisterhousegarden.org/events/

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  • Wednesday, March 27, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Rosemary Verey: The Life & Lessons of a Legendary Gardener

    On Wednesday, March 27, from 6:30 – 8 at the Arnold Arboretum, Barbara Paul Robinson will talk from her personal experience as a gardener with Rosemary Verey and from her research for her book, Rosemary Verey: The Life & Lessons of a Legendary Gardener, which was published by David R. Godine in August 2012. This event is co-sponsored by the Garden Conservancy, Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, and the Friends of Wellesley College Botanic Gardens. Rosemary Verey was an internationally acclaimed garden legend. Although she embraced gardening late in life, she quickly achieved international renown. She was the acknowledged apostle of the “English style,” on display at her home at Barnsley House, the “must have” adviser to the rich and famous, including Prince Charles and Elton John, and a beloved and wildly popular lecturer in America. A child of a generation born between the two World Wars, she went on to create the gardens at her home that became a mandatory stop on every garden tour in the 1980s and 1990s.

    During a sabbatical from law firm Debevoise & Plimpton where she was the first woman partner, Barbara Paul Robinson worked as a gardener for Rosemary Verey at Barnsley House. A hands-in-the-dirt gardener herself, she and her husband created their own gardens at Brush Hill in northwestern Connecticut, featured in articles, books, and on television. Barbara has published articles in the New York Times, Horticulture, Fine Gardening, and Hortus; she wrote a chapter in Rosemary Verey’s The Secret Garden, and she is a frequent speaker.  $5 for members of one of the sponsoring organizations, $15 general admission.  To register, call the Arnold Arboretum’s adult education department at 617-384-5277.

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  • Thursday, January 31, 1:30 pm – Rosemary Verey: The Life & Lessons of a Legendary Gardener

    Barbara Paul Robinson, author of Rosemary Verey: the Life and Lessons of a Legendary Gardener, will come to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, on Thursday, January 31 at 1:30 pm, to give an illustrated talk.

    The book recounts how Ms. Robinson, in mid-career as a New York City lawyer, took a sabbatical to work at Ms. Verey’s famous garden at Barnsley House in the Cotswalds, England. The short internship led to a longtime friendship, so the author was able to observe the rising fame of the great English gardener and to enlist Ms. Verey’s many other associates to contribute their memories to this intimate biography.  After her talk, Barbara Paul Robinson will be open to questions and to signing books. Light refreshments will be served. $10 for Mass Hort members, $15 for non-members. To register for the event, visit www.masshort.org or call Maureen Horn at 617-933-4912.