Tag: Waddesdon Manor

  • Tuesday, January 18, 10 am GMT- Forgotten Women Gardeners: Alice “The All-Powerful” de Rothschild, Online

    Alice de Rothschild (1847 – 1922) was a member of the immensely rich European banking family of that name. Brought up on the continent, she developed Eythrope, the Buckinghamshire estate adjacent to her brother Ferdinand’s Waddesdon Manor, as ‘a showpiece’ garden. She also had a large property in Grasse, on the French Riviera, where she laid out a garden amongst the olive groves, adapting the paths specially to accommodate Queen Victoria’s donkey carriage on the latter’s various outings.

    After her brother’s death Alice inherited the Waddesdon Estate, running all three properties with ‘an unusually strong power of will and inflexibility of purpose […], looking after every detail of her estate, undeterred by any opposition that she might meet with’. This is borne out by a unique series of letters, sent from Grasse back to her head gardener at Waddesdon, which contain detailed instructions for the garden.

    Still adhering to the original High Victorian bedding schemes of the late 19th-century, Alice de Rothschild also developed a close friendship with Ellen A Willmott who advocated the much more informal style of gardening of William Robinson. 2022 is the centenary of Alice de Rothschild’s death which will be marked by various exhibitions at Waddesdon Manor and at Eythrope.

    Dr Sophie Piebenga is the (part-time) gardens’ archivist at Waddesdon Manor, Bucks. Born and brought up in The Netherlands, she has spent all her adult life in the UK, training originally as a gardener with The National Trust and at The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. She diverged into the world of garden history, making the works of the landscape gardener W S Gilpin the topic of her DPhil study at the University of York. Now based in The Cotswolds she divides her time between gardening and giving garden advice, undertaking historic landscape research and leading garden tours for Boxwood Tours.

    This Gardens Trust lecture is £5, and you may register through 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.

  • Monday, May 31, 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm – Other Voices in Garden History: Hearing the Voices from a Human Zoo, Online

    This eighth in a series of illustrated lectures sponsored by The Gardens Trust will explore the impact and legacy of empire, colonialism and enslavement on western garden and landscape history. Our aim is to bring back some of the voices usually absent from this history, to identify and fill gaps in our collective knowledge, and to explore new ways of engaging with the whole history of gardens, landscapes and horticulture.

    King Leopold II of Belgium ran the Congo as his own private colony from 1885 to 1908, treating the local people brutally. With the fortune he made from Congolese ivory and rubber, Leopold embarked on extensive building and landscape projects. The source of his funds was openly celebrated at the 1897 Brussels Worlds Fair, where exhibits included 267 people forcibly shipped from the Congo to be displayed in what were effectively human zoos.

    One of Leopold’s favorite designers was the French landscape architect Elie Lainé, whom Jill Sinclair has been researching for a number of years. Best known in the UK for his work at Waddesdon Manor, Lainé worked for the Belgian king from 1889. This lecture will explore some of the issues around interpreting landscapes funded by (and indeed designed to celebrate) colonialism and enslavement.

    This ticket costs £5, and you may purchase via the link 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.

    Jill Sinclair is a garden and landscape historian based in Sheffield. She is a director of the Historic Gardens Foundation, edited its journal Historic Gardens Review, and teaches the University of Oxford’s online course in the history of the English Landscape Garden. Jill is the convenor of the ‘Other Voices in Garden History’ lecture series.

    Image credit: Part of the ‘Congolese Villages’ at the Brussels Worlds Fair, 1897. HP.1946.1058.1-21, collection RMCA Tervuren; photo A. Gautier, 1897. Shared under the CCA license: CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 BE

  • Five Gardens You Can Tour, Virtually

    House Beautiful magazine has written a timely article on virtual garden tours. The list ranges from Claude Monet’s garden in France, to the Hawaii Tropical Botanical Garden, to Waddesdon Manor in England. Enjoy these in the quiet of your home by visiting https://www.housebeautiful.com/lifestyle/gardening/g31746949/gardens-you-can-virtually-tour/