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RECENT ISSUES

Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No. 4 April/May/June 2009

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Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No.4 April/May/June 2009
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Contents 

Darwin and W. S. Macleay of Elizabeth Bay House
William Sharp Macleay’s Circular or Quinary System provides an extraordinary insight into a pre-Darwinian world view.

Ernest Leviny’s unrealised dreams for his Castlemaine villa
Ernest Leviny owned land in Victoria’s central goldfields where he planned and partially planted a magnificent new villa garden, recalled in a set of superb watercoloured plans.

Hugh Linaker, landscape lardener to the Lunacy Department: a unique position
Hugh Linaker’s career as a landscape gardener in during 1889–1938 charts the influence of modernist ideas on Victoria’s public landscape.

Explorations in landscape design theory - Part One: defining the term ‘landscape’

Unconnected thoughts on gardening
Stuart Read gives a few disparate thoughts on gardens.

Netscape: Australian Newspapers beta

 Profile: Ray Choate

Review essay: Brush with Gondwana
A review of the book Brush with Gondwana: Botanical Artists Group of Western Australia

‘Cultivating Australia Felix’: AGHS Conference, Geelong, October 2009
Geelong is the venue for this year’s AGHS annual national conference.

 

Extracts

Darwin and W. S. Macleay of Elizabeth Bay House   Scott Carlin
In 1837 William Sharp Macleay encouraged Charles Darwin to publish the natural history of the Beagle voyage, which was to form the basis of Darwin’s groundbreaking On the Origin of Species (1859). Macleay had himself been an important ‘natural philosopher’ and his Circular or Quinary System, given a surprising degree of credence by Darwin, provides an extraordinary insight into a pre-Darwinian world view.

Ernest Leviny’s unrealised dreams for his Castlemaine villa           Mandy Stroebel
Ernest Leviny, best known for his estate Buda at Castlemaine in Victoria’s central goldfields, also owned land nearby where he planned and partially planted a magnificent new villa garden, recalled in a set of superb watercoloured plans.

Hugh Linaker, Landscape Gardener to the Lunacy Department: a unique position           Julie Mulhauser
Hugh Linaker is regarded as a horticultural pioneer whose career as a landscape gardener in the employment of both local and state government during 1889–1938 charts the influence of modernist ideas on Victoria’s public landscape.

Explorations in landscape design theory. Part One: defining the term ‘landscape’             Jeannie Sim
This essay is the first in a series on theoretical matters which is intended to provoke discussion. The essays in the series will compare the terms ‘landscape’ and ‘garden, ‘designed landscape’ and ‘cultural landscape’; explore the parameters of design and theory; and finally investigate landscape design and landscape architecture.

Unconnected thoughts on gardening Stuart Read
Richard Aitken’s keynote address at the 2008 Bowral conference drew attention to William Shenstone’s ‘Unconnected thoughts’, published posthumously in 1764. Here Stuart Read gives few of his own disparate thoughts—offered in Shenstone’s same spirit.

Profile: Bibliophile and University Librarian at the Barr Smith Library, The University of Adelaide,
A profile of our most recent National Management Committee member Ray Choate.

 ‘Cultivating Australia Felix’: AGHS Conference, Geelong, October 2009
Geelong—Victoria’s second city that sprawls around the edge of Corio Bay—is the venue for this year’s AGHS annual national conference.

 

Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No. 3 January/February/March 2009

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Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No.3 January/February/March 2009cover20-3

Contents 

‘From wilderness to pleasure ground’
The opening address of the AGHS’s 29th annual national conference.

Charles Darwin, gardens, and Australia
A profile of Charles Darwin’s three months in Australia and his gardens in England.

James Wentworth Davis: pioneering seed merchant of Hobart Town
Seed merchant James Wentworth Davis’s efforts reveal much of the vicissitudes of early colonial life.

Flowers and fashion: the life and death of Frederick Searl
A glimpse of floristry’s private world.

Weeds in Victorian landscapes: a Mount Eliza weed assembly
A comparison of three weed reveals many similarities in their composition.

Conserving the University of Adelaide’s embankment garden
Research on the embankment garden at the University of Adelaide has lead to proposals for its conservation.

Bowral Conference report: October 2009

For the bookshelf
Reviews new books including Tea Roses: Old Roses for Warm Climates; The Zealous Conservator: A Life of Charles Lane Poole; andFlorenceTaylor’s Hats: Designing, Building and Edition Sydney.

National Management Committee profile: Sue Monger

Autumn in New England: April 2009
A brief history of Abington and Salisbury Court in the New England district, NSW.

 

Extracts

‘From wilderness to pleasure ground’              Tim North
The opening address of the Australian Garden History Society’s 29th annual national conference.

Charles Darwin, gardens, and Australia           Patrick Armstrong
Darwin spent three months in Australia during 1836 before returning to a lifetime of research and writing in England.

James Wentworth Davis: pioneering seed merchant of Hobart Town        Sandra Pullman
James Wentworth Davis was amongst the earliest seed merchants of Hobart Town and his efforts to establish the business reveal much of the vicissitudes of early colonial life.

Flowers and fashion: the life and death of Frederick Searl            Linda Emery
A glimpse of floristry’s private world as depicted in photographs recording the funeral in 1920 of Sydney nursery proprietor Frederick Searl.

Weeds in Victorian landscapes: a Mount Eliza weed assembly   John Dwyer
A comparison of three weed assemblages – from Renaissance Germany, 17th century North America and 21st century Melbourne – reveals many similarities in their composition, highlighting close parallels with the colonization of people and plants in diverse parts of the globe.

Conserving the University of Adelaide’s embankment garden   Louise Bird
The embankment garden at the University of Adelaide, established in 1929 by landscape designer Elsie Cornish, has recently been the subject of research leading to proposals for its conservation.

Bowral Conference report: October 2009         Caroline Grant

National Management Committee profile: Sue Monger
An interview with National Management Committee member Sue Monger.

Autumn in New England: April 2009                            Clive Lucas
A brief history of two properties – Abington and Salisbury Court – in the New England district, NSW.

 

Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No. 2 October/November/December 2008

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Contents 

Celebrating Australian House and Garden and its founding editor Beryl Guertner
A profile of the early decades of Australian House and Garden and its founding editor, Beryl Guertner.

Peter Watts: the exit interviews
Peter Watts answers questions prior to his retirement as director of the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales (HHT).

‘Cha-No-Yu’ in Warrawee: Professor Sadler and his Japanese tea house
A look at the career of orientalist Professor Arthur Sadler and how his former house and garden reflected his interests.

Professor Sadler’s garden at Rivenhall, Warrawee
The story of A.L. Sadler’s garden at Rivenhall, setting his tea garden in the wider context of his influence on Australian garden design.

Mystery and malevolence: the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens celebrates 190 years
The Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens earliest years are examined in search of its elusive beginnings.

Jan Seto (1950–2008): an appreciation

National Management Committee profile: Lynne Walker
An interview with National Management Committee member Lynne Walker.

For the bookshelf
Reviews of The Picturesque: Architecture, Disgust and Other Irregularities; Norah Lindsay: The Life and Art of a Garden Designer; Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley:The Aboriginal Architecture of Australia; Management and Maintenance of Historic Parks, Gardens and Landscapes: The English Heritage Handbook.

Orcharding at historic Allwood
A history of Allwood, an early orcharding property in Diamond Valley, Victoria.

 

Extracts

Celebrating Australian House and Garden and its founding editor Beryl Guertner            Howard Tanner
Australian House and Garden celebrates its 60th anniversary this year, a longevity enjoyed by very few Australian magazines. This article profiles the early decades of the journal and its founding editor, Beryl Guertner.

Peter Watts: the exit interviews
Prior to his recent retirement after 27 years as director of the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales (HHT), Peter Watts gave several interviews which form the basis of this article with questioners including writer and broadcaster David Marr.

Cha-No-Yu’ in Warrawee: Professor Sadler and his Japanese tea house        Silas Clifford-Smith
With a growing interest in the life and career of orientalist Professor Arthur Sadler AGH looks at his fascinating career and how his former house and garden in the northern Sydney suburb of Warrawee reflected his interests.

Professor Sadler’s garden at Rivenhall, Warrawee     Colleen Morris
An edited extract from the book Lost Gardens of Sydney whichtakes up the story of Professor A.L. Sadler’s garden at Rivenhall on Sydney’s North Shore, setting his tea garden in the wider context of his influence on Australian garden design.

Mystery and malevolence: the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens celebrates 190 years                Gwenda Sheridan
The Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens, located in the Queen’s Domain, Hobart, celebrates its 190th birthday in 2008—or does it? Here, the Garden’s earliest years are examined in search of its elusive beginnings.

National Management Committee profile: Lynne Walker
An interview with Lynne Walker who joined the AGHS’s National Management Committee in October 2007 bringing with her ten years’ experience as Northern NSW Co-ordinator for Australia’s Open Garden Scheme and a lifetime of gardening.

Orcharding at historic Allwood       Bruce Draper
A history of Allwood, an early orcharding property in Diamond Valley, Victoria.

 

Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No. 1 July/August/September 2008

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Australian Garden History Vol. 20 No.1 July/August/September 2008cover20-1

Contents 

Lost Gardens of Sydney
Extracts from a new book which accompanies the exhibition ‘Lost Gardens of Sydney’.

The influence of environmental thought in Melbourne’s nineteenth century public gardens
Clement Hodgkinson is a neglected figure of Australian garden.

Survey Paddock to people’s park: the story of Richmond Park
Incremental changes to Richmond Park —some sympathetic and some not—have marked its subsequent development.

The Japanese garden in Australia: authentic or alien?
Japanese influence on Australian garden design has existed since the nineteenth century.

‘Bare hills ... blond valleys’: AGHS tour of the Monaro
A trip with Trisha Dixon to her beloved Monaro provided an intimate glimpse of the gardens and countryside.

National Management Committee profiles: John Dwyer
Christina Dyson speaks with John Dwyer to discuss weeds and the environment.

Extracts

Lost Gardens of Sydney      Colleen Morris
Extracts from a new book which accompanies the exhibition ‘Lost Gardens of Sydney’, to be held at the Museum of Sydney from August to November 2008.

The influence of environmental thought in Melbourne’s nineteenth century public gardens   Georgina Whitehead
Clement Hodgkinson is a neglected figure of Australian garden history yet his influence on Victoria’s public parks and gardens was profound and his attitudes linking environmental thought and land management were enlivened by contemporary thought.

Survey Paddock to people’s park: the story of Richmond Park         Lee Andrews
Richmond Park was one of the earliest reservations of parkland in Melbourne’s history. Incremental changes—some sympathetic to its character and some not—have marked its subsequent development.

The Japanese garden in Australia: authentic or alien?        Jennifer Mitchelhill
Japanese influence on Australian garden design has existed since the nineteenth century, but were there any authentic Japanese gardens in Australia prior to the 1980s, and what has stimulated the creation of genuine Japanese gardens in the last thirty years?

‘Bare hills ... blond valleys’: AGHS tour of the Monaro          Sue Keon-Cohen
An AGHS trip with Trisha Dixon to her beloved Monaro, from 26 April to 3 May 2008, provided an intimate glimpse of the gardens and countryside.

National Management Committee profiles: John Dwyer          Christina Dyson
John Dwyer recently joined the Australian Garden History Society’s National Management Committee. Christina Dyson caught up with him to discuss weeds and the environment.

 

Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No. 5 May/June 2008

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Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No.5 May/June 2008

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Contents

William Cobbett: cottager’s friend
English writer William Cobbett’s books and opinions were known in early colonial Australia yet his influence in Australia is yet to be fully documented.

Von Guerard’s Glenara: conservation crosses paths with garden history
Conservation of the von Guerard painting of Glenara has been aided by detailed research uncovering a fascinating sidelight into garden history.

Deconstructing Dr Lhotsky and his Monaro
An examination of European natural historian Dr John Lhotsky’s 1834 exploration of the Australian Alps.

Suzanne Hunt (1946–2008): an appreciation

For the bookshelf
Reviews of Landscape Gardening in Australia, Manual of Practical Gardening, The Diplomatic Gardener: Richard Schomburgk, explorer and botanic garden director, and Backyard: nature and culture in suburban Australia.

From Wilderness to Pleasure Ground: discovering the garden and horticultural history of the Southern Highlands

 

Extracts

William Cobbett: cottager’s friend           Silas Clifford-Smith
English writer William Cobbett was vitally concerned with gardening as it affected the agricultural classes. His books and opinions were known in early colonial Australia yet his influence in Australia is yet to be fully documented.

Von Guerard’s Glenara: conservation crosses paths with garden history      Michael Varcoe-Cocks
Conservation by the National Gallery of Victoria of its much-loved von Guerard painting of Glenara has been aided by detailed research uncovering a fascinating sidelight into garden history.

Deconstructing Dr Lhotsky and his Monaro          Richard Aitken
An examination of forgotten European natural historian Dr John Lhotsky’s 1834 audacious trip to the Monaro of south-east New South Wales.

Suzanne Hunt (1946–2008): an appreciation
An appreciation of Suzanne Hunt (1946–2008) and her enthusiasm for Australian garden history.

From Wilderness to Pleasure Ground: discovering the garden and horticultural history of the Southern Highlands   Chris Webb

 

 

Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No. 4 February/March/April 2008

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Contents

Bolobek: new light on a much-loved garden
Neil Robertson explores a newly discovered early garden at Bolobek.

Nation and Garden Design
Gardens’ role as potent symbols of authority, national sentiment and agents for change.

Noble Rot: exploring some byways of Tasmanian garden history

Tribute: John Stevens, Landscape Consultant (1920–2007)

Fact of Fancy? C.G.S. Hirst’s view of Erin’s home, Boggo
Can watercolours documenting gardens of the colonial period be believed?

For the bookshelf
Reviews of Reading the Garden: the settlement of Australia, and SGAP: the story of Arthur Swaby and the Society for Growing Australian plants.

Under the Spell of the Ages
Tricia Dixon shares her love for the Australian country, its people, and its gardens.

 

Extracts

Bolobek: new light on a much-loved garden          Neil Robertson
Bolobek occupies a special place in the hearts of Australian gardeners. Now newly discovered archival photographs reveal an earlier garden at Bolobek, one redolent of the Arts and Crafts movement.

Nation and Garden Design         Christina Dyson
At key periods in the history of nations, gardens have become potent symbols of authority and national sentiment as well as powerful agents for change.

Noble Rot: exploring some byways of Tasmanian garden history                 Richard Aitken
Garden history has a strange way of pooping up when you least expect it, although those who loiter in libraries should know to expect the unexpected – especially when it involves the dark beauties of Scottish gardens.

Fact of Fancy? C.G.S. Hirst’s view of Erin’s home, Boggo          Glenn R. Cooke
Researchers of Australian garden history are generally delighted when they discover watercolours which document gardens of the colonial period. But can these images be believed? Are they fact of fancy?

 

Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No. 3 November/December 2007/January 2008

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Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No.3 November/December 2007/January 2008
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Contents    

     

    Tasmania Revisited
    Touring historic Tasmanian Gardens.

    Albury: Cultivating a city in the country
    Bruce Pennay takes a look at the history of Albury’s regional landscape.

    Alfred Patterson and Bathurst’s Machattie Park
    A history of Machattie Park, Bathurst, and the influence on its early development by inaugural head gardener Alfred Patterson. 

    ‘Return to Lutyens’: Florence Taylor and the folly of architecture
    Florence Taylor’s copy of Lawrence Weaver’s Lutyens Houses and Gardens reveals her thoughts about the architecture of Edwin Lutyen.

    Conference Review
    An overview of the successful 2007 AGHS conference

    EXTRACTS

    Tasmania Revisited                 Gail Douglass and Trisha Dixon
    The opportunity to join another trip to Tasmania – and to be led by Trisha Dixon and Jackie Courmadias – is one many AGHS members would not miss, regardless of hoew many times we have visited this beautiful isle.

    Albury: Cultivating a city in the country              Bruce Pennay
    An inland settlement, Albury grew into a municipality, a regional city, and a growth centre within a rural contect. As host city for the AGHS’s 28th annual national conference, Bruce Pennay takes a look at the history of Albury’s regional landscape.

    Alfred Patterson and Bathurst’s Machattie Park    Spencer Harvey
    Bathurst’s Machattie Park was established in 1890. As its inaugural head gardener, Alfred Patterson was in a strong position to influence its early development.

    ‘Return to Lutyens’: Florence Taylor and the folly of architecture        Richard Aitken
    Books can occasionally reveal more than covers promise, and this is certainly the case with Sydney architect Florence Taylor’s copy of Lawrence Weaver’s Lutyens Houses and Gardens.

    Conference Review     Max Bourke      
    An overview of the 28th AGHS national conference.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No. 2 September/October 2007

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    Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No.2 September/October 2007

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    Contents

    Themes of delight
    A selection of Nina Crone's garden writing celebrates the range and wit of the Journal's former editor.

    Linnaeus: art and nature
    Three exhibitions celebrate the tercentenary of Linnaeus' birth.

    Tending a legacy: the National Gallery's sculpture garden
    Barbara Buchanan and Richard Vidler outline the principles behind the heritage listed gardens, at a time when the integrity of the design faces significant challenges.

    Meet your National Management Committee
    Journal editor Genevieve Jacobs in conversation with NMC member Ivan Saltmarsh.

    The scent of memory: old roses of the Barossa
    Pat Toolan discusses the foundation of the Barossa Old Rose Repository.

    Reviews
    Portmeirion and The Girl who loved Donkeys.

    Vale: Nina Crone

    EXTRACTS

    Themes of Delight: Nina Crone's Writings
    The Journal's former editor wrote a wide variety of garden related articles for The Age. In tribute following her recent death, the Journal reprints her articles on pomegranates, figs and Eucalyptus camaldulensis.

    Linnaeus: Art and Nature             Scott Carlin     
    As the worlds of botany and gardening celebrate the tercentenary of Karl Linnaeus' birth, three displays at Elizabeth Bay House reflect on the scientist's ongoing influence and connections with Australia.

    Tending the Legacy    Barbara Buchanan and Richard Vidler

    Members of the original landscape architecture team for the National Gallery's sculpture garden outline the principles behind its design. masterminded by the late Harry Howard. They warn that significant changes to the gardens run the risk of damaging an important landscape that was listed on the register of the National Estate just five years after its completion.

    Meet your National Management Committee

    Tasmanian member Ivan Saltmarsh discusses a passion for travel, a late blooming love of gardens and the need to teach garden owners how to identify and document historic gardens.

    The scent of memory  Pat Toolan
    Rose conservator and co-ordinator of the Barossa and Beyond regional group of Heritage Roses in Australia, Pat Toolan, describes the journey towards establishing an Old Rose Repository at Angaston. She describes finding a site for the Repository, the process of collecting a number of old roses and attempting to identify them, often an ongoing puzzle for rose detectives and local historians.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 19 No. 1 July/August 2007

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    Contents

    George Seddon, A Tribute
    Peter watts recalls on outstanding Australian.

    Opening the Wardian Case
    Richard Clough investigates the first successful experiments in live plant transportation

    Spanish Lessons
    Stuart Read discusses lessons to be learned from Spain's response to environmental challenge and a harsh climate

    Meet Your National Management Committee
    Journal editor Genevieve Jacobs in conversation with Max Bourke

    Horticultural Heritage
    Albury writer and 2007 conference speaker Prue Smith on Albury's rich plant legacy

    The Pinjarra Park Puzzle
    John Viska tracks down the possible origins of Western Australia's oldest camellias

    Reviews
    A Country Garden by Fiona Ogilvie and Canberra: City in a Landscape by Ken Taylor

    Vale: Nurserywoman Laura Katter

     

    ABSTRACTS

    George Seddon, A Tribute       Peter Watts
    George Seddon's outstanding contribution to Australia's cultural and natural landscape led the way towards a new understanding about how to protect it and plan for change, while his willingness to challenge the big issues was inspirational. 

    Opening the Wardian Case     Richard Clough
    View article - pages 4-5/ pages 6-7       
    The 1833 voyage of the schooner Persian was to be the first test for what ship's captain Charles Mallard described as "a simple but beautiful discovery". This was the Wardian case, based on the premise that entirely enclosed glass cases could transplant new specimens around the world. The Wardian Case was to dramatically increase the speed of plant distribution around the world, on the eve of the great plant hunting era.

    Spanish Gardens: Shade, Mystery and Lessons          Stuart Read
    Stuart Read discusses the long held ties between Australia and Spain, including many native plants that are both familiar and happy in our gardens. Spain's complex history and demanding climate makes its long tradition of gardening of particular interest to Australians, from the earliest patio and courtyard gardens to those of the present day.

    Meet your National Management Committee: Journal editor Genevieve Jacobs in conversation with Max Bourke
    Former science broadcaster and agricultural scientist Max Bourke reflects on a life spent engaged with landscape, conservation and heritage. Max argues that good conservation and development can co-exist if there is a basis of good scholarship and sound environmental management.

    Horticultural Heritage by Prue Smith
    Albury gardening writer Prue Smith discusses the city's rich horticultural history. Community involvement was encouraged from the outset and the Albury Horticultural Society is one of the oldest continually operating organisations of its kind in the country.

    The Pinjarra Park Puzzle        John Viska
    A visit to historic Pinjarra Park south of Perth drew John Viska's attention to a remarkable collection of camellias, nurtured by the Fawcett family since 1861. Family records showed that these had been imported into the colony at great expense but all names had been lost. Researchled to the intriguing possibility of a link between the two.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 5 May/June 2007

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    Contents

    October in Albury
    Max Bourke outlines an exciting and diverse programme for the forthcoming Albury event.

    Painting colonial plants
    The sale of an epiphyllum hookeri med., illustration prompts examination of this fascinating colonial plant.

    Atmospheric vileness
    Senators selecting the national capital site faced many challenges in Albury a century ago.

    Meet your NMC member
    Genevieve Jacobs in conversation with NMC secretary Di Wilkins.

    A sense of discovery
    The Adelaide post-conference tour discovered layers of garden history in South Australia.

    For the bookshelf
    Reviews Seeds of Change by Richard Aitken; Garden of a Lifetime by Anne Latreille.

    France Fleurie at Courson
    An invitation to enjoy a distinctly different garden festival.

    Valete: Obituaries for Lady Ramsay; Elizabeth Walker.

    ABSTRACTS

    October in Albury                                Max Bourke
    Meandering about the Murray is the theme for this year's annual conference of the AGHS, to be held in Albury on October 19–21. Max Bourke reports that the venue enables consideration of a wide range of issues including garden history, environmental issues and biodiversity management in times of climate challenge.

    Painting Colonial Plants                      Colleen Morris    
    View article - pages 6-7/ pages 8-9
    Sydney botanical artists Beverly Allen was awarded a Gold Medal at the annual RHS botanical art show in London this year for her series of eight illustrations depicting Epiphyllum species and hybrids, one of which was subsequently purchased by the Lindley Library. Given their brief flowering period, the task was described as having a "degree of difficulty of eleven out of ten . Technical issues proved complex but Beverly also discovered a minefield of identification and nomenclature problems.

    Atmospheric Vileness                         Ian Warden
    On February 1902, a group of senators set out on an inspection of suggested sites for the new nation's capital city, among them Albury. Piecing together an amusing account from newspaper articles of the time, Ian Warden relates that the senators faced drought, searing temperatures they found comparable to the Black Hole of Calcutta and at one point were required to fight a bushfire on the railway line near Wagga.

    Meet your National Management Committee: Journal editor Genevieve Jacobs in conversation with NMC secretary Di Wilkins
    Recalling a childhood where gardens were a treasured part of family life, Di Wilkins considers the importance of activism to protect historic gardens and landscapes, and the changes in attitude she has witnessed while working in Federal and Local Government. Following the successful Adelaide conference, Di also discusses the significance of South Australia's considerable garden legacy and the monumental task of organising such an event.

    A Sense of Discovery                         Craig Burton
    The post-conference tour that followed the Adelaide gathering illustrated the depth of garden history in South Australia and the variety of influences that have created a distinctive and important gardening culture in the State. Craig Burton reports on visits to grand homestead gardens rescued from near dereliction, newly made gardens on historic sites and drought resistant innovations responding to a sometimes difficult climate.

     

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 4 Feb/Mar/April 2007

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    Contents

    New Media, A call to action
    Following the successful launch of the ACT/Monaro/Riverina branch DVD, Max Bourke argues that the new media offers significant advantages for the AGHS.

    Designs on History
    Christina Vos reports on the 2006 Adelaide conference..

    Meet your National Management Committee
    NMC chair Colleen Morris in conversation with Journal editor Genevieve Jacobs.

    Buda revisited - not just an historic garden?
    Buda's curator discusses how recent research has linked the historic Castlemaine garden with social and cultural issues of the time.

    Marybank - a find in Adelaide's hills
    An early South Australian farm and garden illustrates social change and enduring history

    Everything's apples
    The demise of the Burnley's experimental fruit collection at the end of the 19th century, and a reflection on the importance of such collections in a time of considerable threat to biodiversity.

    For the bookshelf
    Reviews The Sun King's garden: Louis XIV, Le Notre and the creation of the gardens of Versailles, and Studies in Australian Garden History, Vol 2.

    ABSTRACTS:


    New Media, A call to action              Max Bourke
    Given the Society's mission statement, NMC member Max Bourke argues that the documentation work undertaken by the AGHS needs to extend its range significantly, utilising new media including DVDs. The format has the ability to combine solid intellectual interrogation of a subject - for example Canberra, the city on the Limestone Plains - with social and cultural content, documenting the memories of those who created gardens and places of historic interest. Max Bourke envisages an eventual suite of productions, creating a national snapshot of Australian gardening history at the dawn of the 21st century.

    Designs on History: report on the 2006 Adelaide conference     Christina Vos
    Heritage conservationist and horticulture student Christina Vos reports that the annual national conference in Adelaide, with its theme of keeping garden history in design, included thought provoking papers from Richard Heathcote, who spoke about Ursula Hayward's legacy at Carrick Hill and Stephen Forbes, who placed botanic collections within the context of the Age of Empire. Visits to Carrick Hill and the Museum of Economic Botany followed. Stuart Read's paper on our Mediterranean legacy, Professor Lance McCarthy's explanation of the new Flinders Investigator Garden, Trevor Nottle's overview of Adelaide's gardening history and Marylynn Abbott's personal journey through garden design on two continents were also included in a stimulating and diverse agenda. Visits to The Cedars (Hans Heysen's family home) Urrbrae and the Waite Arboretumn and Forest Lodge enhanced delegates' understanding of Adelaide as a city of garden and gardeners, with a rich and unique history

    Meet your National Management Committee
    National Management Committee chair Colleen Morris discusses the influences on her life work in conservation and question about assigning value to cultural artefacts, including houses and gardens. The importance of spaces, historical accuracy and the vital question of resources for future management are considered, along with the Society's role in advocating for expert assessment, conservation and financial assistance.

    Buda revisited - not just an historic garden?       Lauretta Zilles
    The Leviny family's garden at Castlemaine, now owned by the people of Victoria, developed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century during a time of intense change for women in particular. The questions of suffrage, women's arts both decorative and domestic, access to higher education and active involvement in the cultural milieu of the day can all be viewed through the palimpsest of a home where five intelligent, middle class unmarried women spent their lives. The garden and house taken as a whole illustrate rapidly changing tastes, a growing awareness of native flora and a passion for the decorative arts which encompassed Art Nouveau, Arts and Crafts and early Modernism.

    Marybank - a find in Adelaide's hills                                        Stuart Read and Sue Lloyd
    Dating to 1842, Marybank is one of South Australia's oldest continuously occupied gardens and houses. Rare trees including the palo bianco (now endangered in its native Canary Islands), a majestic Port Jackson fig, cork oaks and many more hardy Mediterranean plants form a garden tapestry that has been nurtured by generations of the Fox family, whose descendants still hold the property today. Changing social conditions and family fortunes, particular passions and new endeavours are all visible in the property's continuing evolution.

    Everything's apples                          Bruce Draper and Allen Gilbert
    The demise of the Burnley's experimental fruit collection at the end of the 19th century at the hands of C.B. Luffman is documented through contemporary accounts of dissension between the curator and the Horticultural Board. Initially envisaged as an experimental collection for the purposes of determining which cultivars were best suited to Australian conditions, the collection fell victim to Luffman's desire to create a school of demonstration. Modern apple orchardist Allen Gilbert writes that in an age where biodiversity is under considerable threat, fruit collections have never been more important. Noting the difficulties posed for serious fruit collections by virus contamination, he argues that financial support, education and awareness are necessary to preserve clean, viable and diverse stocks (now mostly privately held).

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 3 Nov/Dec/Jan 2006/2007

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    cover18-3Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 3 Nov/Dec/Jan 2006/2007

    Contents

    Beautiful Adelaide
    Max Bourke looks back at the Adelaide conference

    Tasmania’s first gardener
    Three European academics share their research on Tasmania’s Recherche Bay and the French presence there more than two centuries ago.

    The Australian War Memorial Garden
    Claire Baddeley documents the years of planning that went into creating this Canberra garden.

    That was the year ... 1926
    A pictorial look back at gardening through the pages of The Australian Home Beautiful

    Publishing our plants
    An extract from Botanical Riches, the latest book from Richard Aitken

    Vale: A giant of gardening
    Tommy Garnett is remembered by some of those who knew him best

    Eureka, the gardens
    A visit to the Ballarat gardens around the Eureka Stockade site

    Abstracts

    Tasmania’s first gardener                       Tony Fawcett
    For the French navigators and scientists it was seen as a Garden of Eden. Yet the gardener of the expedition that visited Tasmania’s Recherche Bay more than 200 years ago, Felix Lahaye, had little success establishing a garden there. Just how hard is explained in a new and as-yet-unpublished paper by three European academics that looks at the visit from the French perspective. They paint Lahaye as a conscientious but simple man who had to fight hard to exert himself among the far better credentialed scientists who visited Recherche Bay all those years ago.

    The Australian War Memorial Garden                       Claire Baddeley
    Millions have visited the Australian War Memorial in Canberra but few know about the to-ing and fro-ing that went on in the first half of last century to create its garden. Added to the Commonwealth Heritage List in 2004 and the National Heritage List in April 2006, the Memorial’s garden was the work of three men – Emil Sodersten, John Crust and Tom Parramore. After winning an international competition, John Crust and Emil Sodersten began collaborative plans for the garden but by the start of World War 2 funds had dried up and Sydney designer Tom Parramore was called in to work with Crust, to create a more realistic landscape. It took until 1941 for the realisation of a design that formed the basis of the Memorial garden through to the 1980s.

    That was the year ... 1926
    Gardening ‘between the wars’ in Australia was at a peak and no matter who or where you were, everyone seemed to be doing it for all they were worth. For many the inspiration was coming from garden designer Edna Walling via her monthly articles in The Australian Home Beautiful. In her features, Walling encouraged, inspired, shared her own gardening experiences and even criticised officialdom for the brutalising of street trees in the name of maintenance.

    Publishing our plants                       Richard Aitken
    Australasian plants had become available through the British nursery trade from the early 1770s, but it was the arrival of the First Fleet and British colonisation of Australia from 1788 that provided the critical impetus for a twoway flow of plants. So writes Richard Aitken in his latest book, Botanical Riches: stories of botanical exploration. In this extract from the book, the author looks at how Australasian plants had become available through the British nursery trade from the early 1770s, and at the promotion of local plants via botanical periodicals. But after gaining immense popularity many of these plants fell victim to fickle horticultural tastes and their use in England declined steadily.

    Eureka, the gardens
    Most Australians with an interest in Australian history know about the Eureka Stockade but many do not specifically know about the The Eureka Stockade gardens. The gardens were set aside by the people of Ballarat East in the late 19th Century to mark the Eureka Rebellion of 1854, a huge step in the development of political and social democracy in Australia. Today the gardens define the site of the rebellion, although they contain no visible relics of the Eureka Stockade or the battle. But it is suspected that under them might lie buried relics and further insights into those turbulent times.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 2 September/October 2006

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    Cover18_2

    Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 2 September/October 2006

    Contents

    From the Chair
    Colleen Morris looks at some disturbing aspects of a report on the Conservation of Australia’s Historic Places.

    Weeds versus history
    Historian and author Peter Cuffley and weed expert Kate Blood discuss the question of what should happen when a plant of historic significance is also classed as a weed.

    The making of Mt Annan
    Two key participants in the establishment of the Mount Annan Botanic Garden in NSW recall its birth.

    The Baron’s sad last years
    Nina Crone reviews a volume of edited correspondence of Baron Ferdinand von Mueller that reveals the sadness he suffered in his later years.

    Reading more into cemeteries
    Catherine Brew tells how cemeteries can reveal so much more about the way people lived and even the way they gardened and tended the land.

    Drawing on the past
    Tony Fawcett interviews award-winning botanical artist Lauren Black about her newly-released portfolio of Tasmanian botanical art based on the principles of past masters of the medium.

    Meet your National Management Committee
    NMC National Treasurer Malcolm Faul discusses his background and how he became involved with the AGHS.

    Victoria’s oldest apple tree?
    Bruce G. Draper investigates an apple tree that some suspect could be linked to the fruit garden of the founder of Melbourne, John Batman.

    Around & about

    Another historic garden saved
    A look at the restoration of the gardens and grounds of Melbourne’s Abbotsford Convent.

    Abstracts

    Weeds versus history
    What happens when a plant deemed to be historically significant is also branded a weed? It’s a dilemma that faces historian, gardener and weed-fighter alike. Author and historian Peter Cuffley and weed expert Kate Blood discuss some of the questions that need to be answered, from how historically important plants that are also weeds should be treated, to whether there is a place at all for weeds in the garden environment.

    The making of Mt Annan
    The birth of Mount Annan Botanic Garden, one of Australia’s most ambitious botanic gardens established in recent times, is examined by two people who were there throughout all the planning – Edwin Wilson who at the time was responsible for media and promotions and Dr Barbara Briggs who was then Senior Assistant Director (Scientific) and deputy to the Director and at times acting Director of the Sydney Botanic Gardens. Launched at a time when national fervour was strong in Australia, the Garden might not have eventuated but for the enthusiasm and opportunism of many of those involved.

    The Baron’s sad last years                       Nina Crone
    He is hailed by many as one of the great botanists and plant collectors of Australia’s past but, as Nina Crone reports, after reviewing the book Regardfully Yours: Selected Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, in the last 20 years of his remarkable life he was deeply hurt by his “dismissal” as the head of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens. A team of scholars led by Emeritus Professor Rod Home spent 15 years tracking down correspondence from and to von Mueller to produce this, the last and, for those Australians interested in our garden history, the most revealing of three volumes based on his writings.

    Reading more into cemeteries                       Catherine Brew
    Cemeteries are primarily the last resting place for the departed but they also give us a fascinating insight into the way people lived and the plants they liked to grow. As cultural landscapes, cemeteries provide a tangible and evocative link to past communities. In many cases, the vegetation can be a vital research clue. According to the author, a landscape architect specialising in cemeteries, patterns of European progress and settlement are documented in cemeteries, as are major events in local communities like epidemics, agricultural booms and busts, mining disasters and war.

    Victoria’s oldest apple tree?                       Bruce G. Draper
    Growing close to the Plenty River in suburban Melbourne is an old tree that has long been referred to as Batman’s Apple Tree because of its supposed links to the colourful founder of the city, John Batman. If you believe the story, the tree was possibly taken from a planting of trees that once formed part of John Batman’s fruit garden, making it the oldest living apple tree in Victoria. Bruce D. Draper researches the story, examines past reports, looks at what others have claimed and comes to his own conclusion.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 1 July/August 2006

    Cover18_1Australian Garden History Vol. 18 No. 1 July/August 2006

    Contents

    From the Chair
    Colleen Morris looks at the importance of the campaign to conserve Recherche Bay in Tasmania, outlines its history and explains how the Australian Garden History Society has played its part in the project.

    The case of the missing notebook
    Colin Mills sheds new light on one of Australia’s earliest and brightest botanists

    Conifer charisma
    David Jones visits one of South Australia’s best preserved historic gardens – possibly the largest private mature pinetum in Australia

    Dame Elisabeth’s garden haven
    Lyn Johnson looks at Dame Elisabeth Murdoch’s garden of Cruden Farm today and delves into the part Edna Walling played in its creation.

    Meet our new patrons
    He is a former Victorian Governor and she is a journalist with impressive credentials writing about Australian gardens – and today they are the new patrons of the Australian Garden History Society.

    For the bookshelf
    Ian Jack reviews The Forgotten Gardens:The Story of the Last Market Gardens in Willoughby and Northbridge, NSW by Ian Rannard.

    Diary dates

    Around & about

    25th Anniversary picnic
    A photographic round-up of the Australian Garden History Society’s 25th Anniversary picnic

    ABSTRACTS

    The case of the missing notebook                       Colin Mills

    The author, an avid garden history researcher, relates how his research into early Australian botanist, horticulturalist and hybridiser John Carne Bidwill unearthed a missing notebook listing Bidwill’s experiments and hybridising work with varieties of Amaryllis belladonna and other plants. The notebook, it seemed, had passed to William Macarthur following Bidwill’s death and was bound in with another publication and so had been overlooked by previous researchers. Colin Mills was able to authenticate the notebook’s history thanks to the handwriting being unmistakably that of Bidwill.

    Conifer charisma                       David Jones

    The South Australian garden of Forest Lodge holds an important place in Australian garden history as it is possibly the largest pinetum or garden of conifers in the country. A large Victorian-styled property with hill station residence and intricate parterred garden, it is located between Stirling and Aldgate in the Adelaide Hills. As David Jones explains, the garden is an extensive representation of the 1800s but also includes a renovation in the 1930s-40s that gave it a northern Italian feel with its many striking statuaries. AGHS members will be able to visit the garden in October this year in conjunction with the Adelaide Convention.

    Dame Elisabeth’s garden haven                       Lyn Johnson

    Much of the horticultural magic at Dame Elisabeth Murdoch’s Cruden Farm on the outskirts of Melbourne has been supplied thanks to its owner. But there was another great gardener involved in its creation, Edna Walling. Lyn Johnson looks at the garden today to discover how much of Walling’s influence is evident there today, and how Dame Elisabeth and her gardener, Michael Morrison, have skilfully given the garden a more welcoming and romantic feel.

    Meet our new patrons                       Tony Fawcett

    Best known as a former champion runner and more recently as a Governor of Victoria, John Landy has always been a keen naturalist and fascinated by plants and the natural beauty of the landscape. A butterfly collector, author of natural history books and a talented photographer, he and his wife Lynne, formerly the Melbourne editor of magazine Country Style, have become joint patrons of the AGHS. In this feature on the Landys, they share details of their own country garden and their plans for the future.

    For the bookshelf                       Ian Jack

    Noel Rannard was the last of the market gardeners in the Valley of Sailors Bay Creek in Sydney and in this book by his son, Ian Rannard, much history of 10 of the market gardens is shared. As Ian Jack explains, these 10 gardens, six of which were operated by Chinese Australians, were the only ones to survive the Second World War. Here is a detailed study of the gardening families, their networks, their flowers and their vegetables.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17 No. 5 May/June 2006

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17, No. 5 May/June 2006
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    Contents

    From the National Management Committee

    Roadsides and Gardens: the 2005 Post-Conference Tour
    Susan Reidy describes the delights of the trip to the Margaret River area – its gardens, landscapes, roadsides and wine!

    Carrick Hill – a twentieth century garden
    Trevor Nottle and Richard Heathcote discuss aspects of Sir Edward and Lady Hayward’s home – the house, the garden and Lady Hayward’s predilection for flowers and painting.

     Gostwyck – an ongoing history
    Lynne Walker begins to unravels the the threads that make up the history of an early property in the Uralla district of Norther New South Wales.

     For the Bookshelf
    Trevor Nottle reviews Remembered Gardens: Eight Women Gardeners and their Visions of the Australian Landscape by Holly Kerr Forsyth.

     Items of Interest

     Mailbox

    Diary Dates

     The 90 th Anniversary of our Avenues of Honour
    Michael Taffe researches the story behind two early Avenues of Honour in Victoria

    ABSTRACTS

     Roadsides and Gardens: the 2005 Post-Conference Tour                       Susan Reidy

    This detailed account of the tour that followed last year’s Annual National Conference in Perth shows the appeal that such activities hold for AGHS members - gardens, landscapes, social and botanical history, camaraderie, fine dining and wining. The gardens visited on the first day were: Amberley Estate winery and Heronsbrook, featuring native, particularly West Australian, plantings. The following day, in the Margaret River district, the group visited the garden at historic Wallcliffe House and that of Swallows, home of botanical artist Pat Negus before lunching at Voyager Estate, based on the Cape Dutch style of architecture. The original garden was designed by Marion Blackwell, the idol of many AGHS members for her knowledge and use of native species. The final section of the tour brought visits to gardens in the Bridgetown area - Sunnyhurst, c. 1890, Montaza c. 1916 and Bella Vista (1909).

    On the return journey to Perth stops were made at Southampton Homestead (1862) on the Blackwood River which was Western Australia’s biggest wine producer in the 19 th century, and the Vision Splendid Gardens, a late 20 th century version of the older tea garden or pleasure garden form.

    Carrick Hill – a twentieth century garden                       Richard Heathcote & Trevor Nottle

    One of the most generous gifts of public benefaction in Australia, the Carrick Hill bequest included the house, 40 hectares of ground, Sir Edward and Lady Hayward’s collection of art, furniture and antiques. Until now the 1930s garden has received only modest attention although the article concludes with an account of its planned renewal.

    Richard Heathcote, the current director of Carrick Hill, describes the early history of the site and discusses the influences on the Haywards when they planned the house and garden. Trevor Nottle covers the way Ursula Hayward (née Barr Smith) brought an Arts and Crafts approach to the house as she endeavoured to break away from her conservative, aristocratic background and move toward a life of self-expression and creativity. The result was a property very much in the English Country House style and the garden was integral to that although it is difficult to determine how much real engagement Lady Hayward had with the garden at Carrick Hill.

    Three projects are currently in progress for the garden at Carrick Hill – the remaking of Lady Hayward’s Flower Gardens, the application of water-wise techniques to educate the public and the Children’s Literary Trail with a series of landscape features inspired by children’s stories.

    Gostwyck - an ongoing history                       Lynne Walker

    Lynne Walker likens the history of Gostwyck to ‘a mystery inside an enigma’ explaining the research is ongoing as more photos and information come to hand. There is no written history but oral stories and recollections dating back to the 1940s are being followed up. The property was first taken up by Edward Gostwyck Cory probably in the 1820s. It was then sold to Henry Dangar in 1834, thereafter being transferred to Dangar brothers over the years.

    Photographs from the 1900s show two gardens: the lower of these has now disappeared, but elements such as the avenue of elms, planted in 1856, indicate the beginning of gardens around the homestead. The upper gardens surrounding the house are still beautifully planted and maintained and the borders abound in roses and perennials. The sunken garden with its pond was originally a tennis court.

     The garden at Gostwyck shows strong evidence of professional design but to date no records of a designer working on it have been found.

     Ninetieth Anniversary of our Avenues of Honour                       Michael Taffe

    Michael Taffe is doing formal research into Victoria’s Avenues of Honour and he finds that the best known, Ballarat’s Avenue of Honour, was by no means the first. He details the first two as those at Eurack, near Beeac in Victoria’s western district and at Sassafras on the Dandenong Tourist Road. Brief accounts of these two avenues are given in this back cover article.

     

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17 No. 4 February/March/April 2006

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17, No. 4 February/March/April 2006
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    Contents

     From the Chair
    Colleen Morris discusses the question of membership encouraging everyone to return the Membership Survey Questionnaire and to enter the draw for a copy of Anna Pavord’s acclaimed book The Naming of Names.

    The Novel Industrial Enterprises of Daniel Bunce
    Ruth Dwyer investigates a little known activity of Curator of the Geelong Botanic Gardens.

    Beyond Neatness
    Sarah Cains challenges the Southern Highlands tradition of gardening.

    The Napier Building Courtyard
    David Jones focuses on a South Australian example of a garden design by John Stephens

    Greek Gardens in West End
    Glenn Cooke writes of the Greek contribution to gardening in Brisbane..

    Visit to Myall Park, Glenmorgan
    Susan & Bruce Martin record in word and picture a visit to the home of the ‘Gordon’ grevilleas.

    For the Bookshelf
    Nina Crone reviews The Naming of Names by Anna Pavord

    Diary Dates

    Valete
    Pamela Jellie pays tribute to Ruth Tindale and David Jones writes of the life and work of Gavin Walkley.

    Southeby’s Wollemi Pine Auction
    Peter Cousens experiences the excitement of an important botanical event.

    Abstracts

    The Novel Industrial Enterprises of Daniel Bunce                       Ruth Dwyer
    Original research reveals how the curator of the Geelong Botanic Gardens to advantage of the Victorian Selection Act of 1862 to lease land in the Parish of Gnawarre, just 10 miles out of Geelong, for a Novel Industrial Enterprise – the establishment of a vineyard and a garden for medicinal plants. Ruth Dwyer traces the fate of this lease and that of neighbouring ones. After Bunce’s death his widow, Julia, took up residence on the land and increased her holding to 150 acres through constant correspondence and representation to the authorities.

    Beyond Neatness                       Sarah Cains
    Through an evocative description of her garden in the Southern Highlands, Sarah Cains makes a plea for greater sensitivity to the natural environment when establishing a garden. She challenges the gardening traditions of the area – essentially that of the ‘hill station garden’ – with her garden full of native plants and she highlights the pleasures such a garden brings. Her message is that ‘committed and experienced gardeners need to set an example, to show flexibility and intelligence in responding to new challenges by recognizing that an essential element of gardening is the ability to change.’

    The Napier Courtyard, South Australia                       David Jones
    This is the first of several articles on South Australian garden design to prepare for the Annual Conference in Adelaide (20 th to 22 nd October 2006) on the theme ‘Keeping History in Garden Design’. Associate Professor David Jones, Director of the Landscape Architecture Program in the School of Architecture and Urban Design at the University of Adelaide discusses a South Australian example of the work of John Stevens, who worked with some of the most innovative and contemporary architects in Melbourne – Robin Boyd, Stephenson & Turner, Bates Smart & McCutcheon, and Geoffrey Spowers. The article discusses the influence of Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx on Stevens’ work.

    Greek Gardens in West End                       Glenn R. Cooke
    Brisbane ’s inner suburban West End continues to be a suburb in transition, Notable as a refuge for workers, migrants, students and the underprivileged for generations, West End is now a ‘trendy’ address and is being gentrified. The result is a threat to the gardens established by Greek migrants. Glenn Cooke discusses elements of the Greek migrant garden with a ‘scented garden’, a culinary or herb garden and a productive or vegetable garden. He gives example of plants usually found in these gardens and points up the possible disappearance of such gardens as the next generation move out to newer, outer suburbs like Carindale.

    Visit to Myall Park, Glenmorgan, Queensland                       Susan Martin
    A detailed and well illustrated account of a trip by the Queensland Branch of AGHS to Myall Park Botanic Garden established by David Gordon who developed the noted ‘Gordon’ grevilleas A comprehensive account of some of the remarkable Australian plants that Gordon acclimatized is given together with an account of the nursery (now closed) and well respected herbarium. The Gallery which houses the permanent Dorothy Gordon botanic art exhibition has become a busy centre for many artistic and educational activities for community groups

    For the bookshelf
    Nina Crone reviews Anna Pavord’s latest book The Naming of Names explaining why she considers it the year’s best buy in the field of botanic history.

    Valete
    Pamela Jellie pays tribute to the work of Ruth Tindale (nee Adams) 1918-2006, a noted artist and puppet-maker who with her husband George established an exceptional exotic garden among the lofty eucalypts at Sherbrooke in the Dandenong Ranges. Ruth’s particular interest was bulbs, rock and alpine plants and she belonged to many international societies interest in these plants. .

    David Jones highlights the work of Gavin Walkley in the field of landscape architecture and education, giving an account of his career and work for BHP, for landscape work in Burra and Murray Bridge and, at Noel Lothian’s invitation, on the glasshouse for the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. Most importantly ‘he actively sought the establishment of a single unified Australian environmental design instate that brought together all planning and design professions’

    Sotheby’s Wollemi Pine Auction                       Peter Cousens
    Peter Cousens attended the Wollemi Pine Auction and he describes the first sale of these trees – detailing the lots, the first bid, the crowd reaction and the outcome of the sale.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17 No. 3 November/December 2005/ January 2006

    Contentscover17-3

    From the Chair – Colleen Morris reports on deliberations at the National Management Committee Meeting

    Plant Auctioneers & Travelling Salesmen – Richard Clough’s research reveals an interesting aspect of John Baptist’s business.

    ‘From Sea to Scarp‘ - Report of the 26 th Annual National Conference in Perth.

    Walling on a Wall – a community project in Mooroolbark recognizes one of the district’s former residents.

    The Italianate Gardens of Hepburn Springs – Gael Shannon discusses the way today’s owners have maintained the spirit of the original gardeners at Lavandula and Villa Parma.

    For the Bookshelf
    Christine Reid reviews English Gardens of the Twentieth Century by Tim Richardson, Trevor Nottle reviews The Old Country – Australian Landscapes, Plants and People by George Seddon, Nina Crone reviews Picturesque Pursuits: Colonial Women Artists & the Amateur Tradition by Caroline Jordon, Paul Thompson reviews The Afterlife of Gardens by John Dixon Hunt, Colleen Morris reviews A Passion for Plants: the Treseders of Truro by Suzanne Treseder and Nina Crone reviews Tasmania’s Recherche Bay, a globally inspiring story by Bob Browne.

    Town and Country – Suzanne Hunt visits an exhibition of portraits of colonial homes and gardens.

    Items of Interest

    Diary Dates

    Vale: Frank Ugody

    Vale: Barney Hutton

    Three York Beauties – Nina Crone reports on the gardens visited in York, WA, on the ‘Conference Optional Day’.

    Abstracts

    Plant Auctioneers and Travelling Salesmen                      Richard Clough
    Sydney nurseryman John Thomas Baptist sent plants for auction to fourteen cities in Australia beginning in 1857 in Melbourne. Others like William Paradise, Joseph James, junior, and Francis Ferguson followed suit, but Baptist’s activities appear the most widespread with consignments going to Queesnsland, New Zealand and even India during the 1860s. Clough details some of the stock included on the auction lists as well as the vicissitudes of the ventures. Although Baptist, junior, gave up retailing plants after his father’s death, other nurseryman continued the practice of travelling plant sales. Two catalogues in the Mitchell Library evidence French nurseries sending stock to Australia - M. Gaugin-Gaudillon after 1856 and Pellorce and Co. after 1879.

    ‘From Sea to Scarp’ – Report of the 26 th Annual National Conference in Perth.
    This report presents the highlights of Christopher Vernon’s summary of the lecture component of the conference, detailing the keys points raised by participating speakers.

    The Italianate Gardens of Hepburn Springs                       Gael Shannon
    Two properties in the Hepburn Springs area of Victoria originally developed by Swiss and Italian immigrants are described, together with a brief outline of the contribution these settlers made. A detailed account of Carol White’s ‘romantic notion’ of developing a productive farm similar to those of in Ticino, Switzerland led to Lavandula, while Richard Rigby set about restoring the property once owned by Italian immigrant Fabrizzio Crippa and then making an Italian inspired garden. Shannon explains how the surrounding Australian landscape influenced both White and Rigby, contending that the resulting gardens were ‘in a quite Australian representation’.

    Town and Country: Portraits of Colonial Homes and Gardens                       Suzanne Hunt
    In her review of this important travelling exhibition curated by Tracy Cooper-Lavery for the Bendigo Art Gallery, Suzanne Hunt emphasizes the relatively short period of portraying colonial houses and gardens in painting – from 1830 to 1870. Thereafter photography superseded the commissioned portraits. She encourages viewers to note the ‘artistic licence’ which characterised many of the paintings and she admires the sweeping landscapes depicted by Clark, von Guerard and Chevalier.

    Vale: Frank Ugody 1925-2005                       David Jones
    David Jones pays tribute to an expert nurseryman outlining how Hungarian born Ugody, a graduate of the University of Agriculture in Budapest, suffered dispossession of property and detention following the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1945. After his arrival in Adelaide in 1949 Ugody established a nursery and garden design business and became a well respected expert in matters horticultural,

    Vale: Barney Hutton 1911-2005                       Peronelle Windeyer
    Barney Hutton’s daughter gives a personal account of her father’s life and love of plants, gardens and history from the days in Kashmir, through boarding school in England, study at Cambridge, teaching at Geelong Grammar School to the making of the garden at ‘Woodbury’ at Mount Macedon. He had many and wide-ranging interests – writing about gardening for TheAge and for the Australian GardenJournal (fore-runner of Australian Garden History), membership of the Species Peony International Network (SPIN) and the Victorian (later Australian) Open Garden Scheme.

    Three York Beauties                       Nina Crone
    York , established in 1851 as the first town beyond the Darling Scarp in Western Australia, is notable for early colonial buildings and challenging climatic conditions for gardeners. Three gardens in York, visited on the ‘conference optional day’ – Lowe House, Tipperary and Wynobbing – are impressive examples of ‘no lawn’ gardens. Use of lateritic gravel paths, hardy plants, and imaginative design make them particularly appropriate to the harsh inland environment.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17 No. 2 September/October 2005

    Contents

    A Gentleman’s Park cover17_2
    Carol Mansfield traces the story of Woodbridge at Guildford. Originally selected by Governor Stirling as a country retreat it later played an important role in Western Australia’s nursery business.

     International Auction of the Wollemi Pine
    Jan Gluskie details arrangements for the first sales to the public of ‘the botanical find of the century’.

    Strathfieldsaye
    Susan Thompson culls the essence from her conservation report to give a history of this historically important property on the shore of Lake Wellington in Gippsland and John Hawker, horticulturist with Heritage Victoria provides a comprehensive plant list with a plan drawn by Pamela Jellie.

     A Charter for Tree Management
    Warwick Mayne-Wilson reports on a forum held to consider the formulation of a ‘tree charter’ akin to the Australian ICOMOS Burra Charter for heritage items and places.

    Items of interest

    Diary dates

    For the bookshelf
    Suzanne Hunt reviews The Unusual Life of Edna Walling by Sara Hardy and Nina Crone reviews Arts and Crafts Gardens by Wendy Hitchmough.

     

    Abstracts

    A Gentleman’s Park                      Carol Mansfield
    Captain James Stirling, Western Australia’s founding governor first selected this land on the Swan River upstream of Perth in 1829 and used it as a country retreat for ten years. After a long period of leaseholders, Charles Harper purchased a portion of the property. A man of considerable enterprise and many interests – ‘explorer, pastoralist, pearler, agriculturalist, inventor, educationist, newspaper proprietor and member of parliament’ – Harper employed Thomas Price as gardener. Price had worked in the London nursery of James Veitch and that of Thomas Laing and Harper invited him to become a partner in ‘Woodbridge Nurseries’ which was gaining a local reputation for excellence. By 1906 Harper had opened Ferndale, a satellite nursery at Ballingup in the south-west of the state.

    After Harper’s death in 1912 Woodbridge property suffered neglect, the house being put to a variety of institutional uses until it was vested in the National Trust and opened to the public in 1970. A brief description of the much reduced remnant garden is described. .

    International Auction of the Wollemi Pine                      Jan Gluskie
    Over the coming months the first generation of pines propagated from the wild population discovered in 1994 in the Wollemi National Park will be offered for sale to the public. Sales of Wollemia nobilis, ‘the botanical find of the century’ will take place as follows:

    • Collector’s Edition (approximately 200 trees 2.5 metres tall) by auction at 3pm on 23 October 2005 in front of Rathbone Lodge, RBG Sydney.
    •  Limited Edition (approximately 10,000 trees 1.5 metres tall) to be sold through selected nurseries from April 2006.
    •  Conservation Collection (a large number of trees in smaller pots suitable for indoors, balconies or garden use) to be sold through selected nurseries from April 2006.

    The fascinating story of the remarkable discovery of these trees is told in the book The Wollemi Pine by James Woodford, Text Publishing 2000 which is available in most bookstores and libraries.

    Strathfieldsaye                       Susan Thompson
    Susan Thompson culls the essence from her conservation report to give a history of this historically important property on the shore of Lake Wellington in Gippsland. John Hawker, horticulturist with Heritage Victoria, provides an up-to-date plant list together with a plan drawn by Pamela Jellie .

     The homestead has a notable garden developed in the Disher period with contributions from Ellis Stone and Edna Walling. It suffered a decline after Dr Clive Disher’s death but there are rich horticultural records from the property in the Melbourne University Archive and it is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register (H 262). The challenges faced by the current ‘garden committee’ are discussed together with a projected management plan.

     Illustrations include the original 1892 plan of the homestead and garden, an photograph by Ellis Stones, invoices from contractors and nurserymen and pictures from the Neumann Album which was given to Dr Disher by the family that managed the property over two generations.

     A Charter for Tree Management                       Warwick Mayne-Wilson
    Warwick Mayne-Wilson details the speakers and the issues they raised. These covered such things as individual connexions with significant trees, ‘fitness of purpose’ over time, natural and cultural values, issues faced by developers, managing mature to senescent trees, the physiology of declining trees, tree preservation orders, community issues, management plans, and policy and management issues.

     The outcomes of the forum are also listed for ongoing action.

     For the bookshelf
    Suzanne Hunt reviewed The Unusual Life of Edna Walling by Sara Hardy and Nina Crone reviewed The Arts and Crafts Garden by Wendy Hitchmough.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 17 No. 1 July/August 2005

    Contents

    Working in tandem
    Richard Clough & Megan Martin each discuss aspects their work and enthusiasm for books which provide valuable material for research into aspects of garden history

    William Paterson, amateur colonial botanist
    Nan Smith, President of the Norfolk Island Historical Society, provides an insight into the life of William Paterson and his association with Norfolk Island as an amateur botanist.

    On the move
    Keith Jorgensen and John Viska recall moments of gardens visited during the Annual National Conference in Sydney last October. Nina Crone and Heather Thomson record the Norfolk Island trip in word and picture. John Hawker describes the significance of Strathfieldsaye, a historic estate in Gippsland which will be visited later this year by the Victorian Branch.

    Postcard memories – or more?
    Ken Duxbury’ s nostalgic postcards of the Bougainvillea Rest House in the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne inspire an article on William Guilfoyle’s ‘carefully controlled visual experiences’ for visitors to the Gardens.

    For the bookshelf
    Trevor Nottle reviews The Royal Horticultural Society: a history 1804-2004 by Brent Elliot.

    Items of interest

    Diary dates

    The Convent: a new working bee site.
    An account of the Contemplative Garden being restored by volunteers under the leadership of Pamela Jellie.

    Abstracts

    Working in tandem                      Richard Clough & Megan Martin
    Professor Richard Clough worked with Sylvia Crowe on the landscape of Basildon New Town, in England, before appointment as the first landscape architect employed by the National Capital Development Commission between 1959 and 1981. Thereafter, until his retirement in 1986 he was Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of New South Wales. In this article he reflects on his passion for book collecting, his love of history, his interest in plant catalogues and he discusses some of his ‘special’ books. Last year he donated his book collection to the Caroline Simpson Library and Research Collection at the Historic Houses Trust which is now situated on the Old Mint site in Macquarie Street, Sydney.

    Megan Martin spent her childhood in western and Far North Queensland before taking a degree in Old Norse and Old English at James Cook University. Work in Tasmania and London followed and led to a M. Litt. at Sydney University. Megan has worked for the HHT since 1997 in its library and research section. She outlines the nature of the collection she has responsibility for, describing its range of formats, its focus, the value of the Clough Collection, recent bibliographic work and the provenance of works in her care.

    William Paterson, amateur colonial botanist                      Nan Smith
    While in Norfolk Island members of AGHS attended a meeting of the Norfolk Island Historical Society at which its President, Nan Smith, gave a talk on William Paterson.
    This article is the text of her talk. It outlines Paterson’s early interest in botany and time spent collecting botanical specimens in southern Africa. There followed a commission in the 98 th Regiment, service in India and then gazettal as Captain with the New South Wales Corps and travel to Sydney with the 3 rd Fleet. On arrival at Sydney Paterson was immediately sent to Norfolk Island where he did some botanising and maintained contact with Sir Joseph Banks. A brief account of Paterson’s subsequent career is also given.

    On the move                      Keith Jorgensen, John Viska, Nina Crone, John Hawker
    Accounts of visits, excursions and tours, past and future, organised by AGHS. Keith Jorgensen from Queensland writes of the garden at Bronte House in Sydney, John Viska, from Perth, describes three properties (Ellensville, Denham Court and Horsley) visited on a post-conference tour, Nina Crone, from Victoria, outlines aspects of a trip led by Timothy Hubbard to Norfolk Island and John Hawker, horticulturist with Heritage Victoria, explains the significance of Strathfieldsaye which will be included in a week-end trip to Gippsland in November.

    Postcard Memories – or more? Ken Duxbury
    Ken Duxbury discusses the placement and design of rest houses in William Guilfoyle’s Botanic Gardens in Melbourne. He concentrates on the Bougainvillea Rest House which was damaged by a falling branch in 1969 and the house was demolished and replaced by a severely functional shelter. Duxbury puts a case for re-instatement of the Bougainvillea Rest House following Guilfoyle’s original design.

    For the bookshelf
    Trevor Nottle reviews The Royal Horticultural Society: a history 1804-2004 by Brent Elliot.

    The Convent: a new working bee site.
    Originally the site of the French religious order, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, the focus of the working bee is restoration of the Contemplative Garden in which the sisters used to walk. A list of the surviving plants along this walk is given.

    Australian Garden History Volume 16 Number 5 May/June 2005


    Contents

     National Management Committee News
    Colleen Morris . Chair of the Australian Garden History Society reports on the work in progress and future projects.

    An Appeal to Patriotism
    Richard Clough describes an initiative taken by the Feminist Society during World War I to encourage women to take up horticultural pursuits.

    Barratt’s Wellington Nursery
    John Viska outlines the career of a convict gardener who arrived in the Swan River colony in 1851, became Government Gardener and established a thriving nursery by 1890.

    Nursery Blooms
    Cas Middlemis discovers that the Adelaide nursery of C.E. Newman and Sons was at the forefront of introducing the African violet to the world.

    Is it Edna’s or Claire’s Garden?
    Sandra Pullman details her research into the garden at Mooramong near Skipton in Western Victoria and concludes it was Claire Mackinnon rather than Edna Walling that influenced its design.

    The Reminiscences of Alfred Gelding, nurseryman
    Extracts from the memories of the fourth son of John Gelding, prominent Sydney nurseryman, written in 1937.

    Vale – Betty Rutherford Woodward
    from David Jones

    For the Bookshelf
    SuzanneHunt reviews Green Pens, compiled and edited by Katie Holmes, Susan K. Martin and Kylie Mirmohamadi, and Trevor Nottle reviews George Forrest: Plant Hunter by Brenda McLean.  

    Hard to Believe
    George Jones offers some additional information about Picconia excelsa.

    Mailbox
    Letters from Jayne Salmon and Marion Downe

    Capetown: halfway to Sydney
    Details of a fascinating exhibition of art works from the Oppenheimer Africana Collection now open at the Museum of Sydney.

     

    Abstracts

     An appeal to patriotism Richard Clough
    Professor Richard Clough traces the short history of the Women’s Horticultural and Home Industries Society Limited which was established in New South Wales soon after the outbreak of the First World War by the Feminist Club, a group supported by Rose Scott, the pioneer of women’s suffrage.

    This group lobbied the state government and received promises that residential schools for training women for horticultural and rural pursuits, viz. a Training Farm and Demonstration Orchard at Dural and the Pitt Town Farm ( Scheyville). It also to have a day school for horticulture set up at Moore Park.

    The Moore Park proposal never eventuated but was replaced by a ‘ Demonstration School and Nursery’ at Scarness, the home of William Harding, in Darling Street, Chatswood. A shop, located in Victoria Arcade, Castlereagh Street was also established to sell preserves, vegetables, seedlings, flowers, cakes and honey. However, by 1921 the Women’s Horticultural and Home Industries Society had sunk into oblivion.

    Barratt’s Wellington Nursery John Viska
    John Viska outlines the history of early plant nurseries in Western Australia from the first attempts at acclimatization on Garden Island, through the plant growing enterprises advertised in the press during the 1830s and 1840s and the arrival of the convict gardener Enoch Barratt in 1851.

    By 1866 Barratt was winning prizes in the Horticultural Society’s Show for rhubarb and pansies. The same year he successfully applied for the post of Government Gardener, a position he held until 1880. He and his son James maintained the nursery business, becoming agents for the renowned Darling Nursery in NSW which was owned by Thomas Shepherd and Company. Barratt’s nursery it rapidly expanded with the discovery of gold in Western Australia but began to face competition from other nurseries. By 1904 the lots that made up the Barratt Nursery were sold to the timber company of Bunning Bros.

     Nursery Blooms Cas Middlemis
    Research by Cas Middlemis shows how the Adelaide nursery of C.E. Newman and Sons was selling the seed of the African violet (Saintpaulia ionantha ), just two years after it was discovered (1892) in Tanzania. Newman who emigrated from Germany in 1846 established contact with the Friedrich Benary Seed Company in Erfurt, a firm that began commercial selling of African violet seed in 1893. That the African violet was unavailable in the United States until the mid 1920s highlights how the South Australian nurseryman was at the cutting edge of his business.

     Mooramong: is it Edna’s garden or Claire’s? Sandra Pullman
    In the course of work for her studies at Burnley College, Sandra Pullman came to the conclusion that the garden at the National Trust (Victoria) property of Mooramong, in the Western District of Victoria reflects the influence of Claire Mackinnon, the silent movie star who married Kenneth (Scobie) Mackinnon in 1937, rather than that of Edna Walling.

    This article details the research undertaken by Pullman as she went through photograph albums, visitor books, plant lists and made archeological excavations. She also interviewed local identities in the Skipton region and considered the professional association between Edna Walling and architect Marcus Martin A comparison was made between the Walling designed garden at Boortkoi and that at Mooramong. Pullman concluded that the Mooramong garden was ‘a Claire Mackinnon garden of the 1930s and 1940s and should be interpreted as such.’

    The Reminiscences of Alfred Gelding
    In the course of his research on the Sydney nurseryman John Gelding, Silas Clifford-Smith found an account of life in early Sydney written by John Gelding’s fourth son Alfred. Written in 1937 when he was 89, Alfred recalls the family’s moves from Rushcutter’s Bay to Double Bay and then to Petersham, early flower shows in the Botanical Gardens, Sydney personalities of the day – Sir Charles Cowper of Camden, Sir William Macleay of Elizabeth Bay and Sir Daniel Cooper of Woollahra. Of interest.

     

    Australian Garden History Volume 16 Number 4 February/March/April 2005

    Contents


    The grotto area at Yarralla,
    West Concord in 2004.
    Constructed around 1890
    by Italian artisans the grotto
    is one of the largest of its
    type in NSW and it evidences
    the landscape development
    of the estate. Its fabric is
    extremely fragile and is
    currently being restored.

     


    Gardening under threat
    Warwick Mayne-Wilson analyses the reasons people garden and considers gardening as we know it is under threat as housing plots become smaller and houses become larger.

    Garden Watch – excellent work in Canberra
    For the time being the trees in York Park are saved. Despite AGHS advocacy the new rose garden at Old Parliament House has lost its heritage features. The publication Early Ainslie Gardens outlines the history of five gardens in the Corroboree Park precinct.

    Friendship through flowers
    Elspeth Douglas traces the history of the Ipswich Horticultural Society detailing the organization of early shows, noting the exhibits and exhibitors and describing its contemporary role.

    Some Ipswich gardens – Booval House, Cooneana and Rockton
    Helen Jackson writes of Booval House built in the 1850s as the homestead on a productive rural property. Susan Martin describes the contribution the Welsby and Davies families made in establishing the garden at Cooneanna, a late 1860s property and Jani Haenke and Angela Geertsma recall the development of the garden at Rockton.

    From coal mines to rain forests – Lloyd Bird
    Glenn Cooke profiles the remarkable contribution Lloyd Bird has made to preserving vestiges of the Woogaroo Scrub landscape through the work he began when he established a small rainforest on the site of a former brickyard.

    Correspondence on colonial plants
    Stuart Reid offers a list of his favourite plants seen on last year’s post-conference tour and Colleen Morris responds.

    For the bookshelf
    Lucy Barton reviews Margaret Somerville’s book Wildflowering: the life and places of Kathleen McArthur, and Nina Crone reviews Herbarium by Robyn Stacey and Ashley Hay.

    Valete
    David Jones celebrates the life and work of two significant South Australian garden identities – Noel Lothian and Christine Michell.

    Abstracts

    Gardening under threat Warwick Mayne-Wilson
    Warwick Mayne-Wilson considers the contemporary trend towards larger ande larger houses on smaller and small blocks is a threat to gardening as we know it. He examines at some length the reasons people garden – for food, for trade, for the joy of production, to imitate nature, to study natural ecosystems or to create a work of art. Further, his discusses the way memories, dreams, and fantasies influence the creation of personal surroundings drawing attention to the current fashion for ‘lifestyle’ designs. When factors such as shortage of water, pressure of time and the increasing tendency of women to engage in full-time work are added to the equation the future of the domestic garden appears bleak. However Mayne-Wilson sees some hope in new initiatives that are emerging in different parts of the world.

    Friendship through flowers Elspeth Douglas
    The Ipswich Horticultural Society is the oldest in Queensland and the Chairperson of the Queensland Branch of the Australian Garden History Society, Elspeth Douglas, has researched the society from its beginnings in 1866 when its ambit also included agriculture. Her account offers a vivid picture of the early period in the second half of the 19 th century. In 1912 the redoubtable curator of Queen’s Park, Mr Turley, revived the fortunes of the then languishing Society by organizing the separation of the Ipswich Horticultural Society from the Agricultural Society. Douglas’s study concludes with comments about the Society in the Ipswich community today.

    Some Ipwich Gardens
    Booval House - Helen Jackson
    Helen Jackson describes her endeavours to restore a house and garden that had been in institutional use by the Sisters of Mercy for over seventy years. Booval House, built in the late 1850s, was originally the centre of a farm that carried stock and grew grain, citrus fruit and cotton. Jackson is particularly interested in the different plantings that occurred over the years.

    Cooneana - Susan Martin
    The City of Ipswich acquired Cooneana in 1997 and the Ipswich Historical Society has set in place plans to preserve the property. Built in 1868-69 for Samuel Welsby, Cooneana was associated with the Welsby/Cameron/Davies family for over a century. There were some keen gardeners over the generations and photographs of the garden provide an idea of its graceful yet utilitarian nature.

    Rockton - Jani Haenke and Angela Geertsma
    Bought by the Haenke family in 1918, Rockton’s history goes back to 1854 and the garden is notable for the number of early plantings that still remain – figs, hoop pine, tulipwood and jacarandas. The garden also shows the preferred shrubs and plants of early twentieth century gardeners (acalyphas, crotons, cordylines, roses and gerberas) and is beginning to reflect twenty-first century tastes with plantings of bromeliads and hippeastrums.

    From coal mines to rainforests – Lloyd Bird Glenn Cooke
    Glenn Cooke visits the small but towering rainforest that Bundamba coal miner Lloyd Bird created in his back garden on the site of a former brickyard. Bird’s interest in rainforests was kindled during childhood visits in the 1930s to the South Queensland

    Coast and when he came to establish his own rainforest he collected seed from Albert Brett’s farm on the headwaters of the Condamine. Believing that ‘if you plant a tree in the right place it looks after itself’ Bird set about finding the appropriate local native species for his rainforest. Involvement with the society for Growing Australian Plants in the early 1970s led to collecting trips and the identification of new plants, co-authorship of the publication Vine Forest Atlas for South-East Queensland, preservation of the Woogaroo Scrub, and advocating the adoption of the Plunkett mallee (Eucalyptus curtisii) as Ipswich’s floral emblem in 1996. Lloyd’s work is recognized in Notelaea lloydii a previously unrecorded native olive discovered in remnant bushland at Mt Crosby.

     

    Australian Garden History Volume 16 Number 3 November/December 2004/January 2005

    Celebrations
    Ipswich · Geelong · Annual Conference

    Contents

    Research & Researchers
    News of recent or current research into garden history and related subjects.

    Introducing Ipswich in Queensland
    Elspeth Douglas outlines the history of Ipswich, celebrating the centenary of its proclamation as a city.

    Queens Park Ipswich
    Jan Seto traces the course of Queens Park as a remnant of a unique historical network of regional botanic gardens in Queensland.

    Japanese Gardens for Ipswich
    Chris Boulton and Rob Sewell introduce Nerima Gardens whose design seeks to capture the philosophy of Japanese garden design while promoting a distinct Ipswich identity through the use of local plants.

    Genesis of a Historic Garden – Part 2
    Volkhard Wehner continues his account of the garden at Folly Farm outside Melbourne with a description of development after the Edna Walling period and adds information about the original Folly Farm in Berkshire, England.

    Gardenesque – a book and an exhibition
    Howard Tanner reviews a significant exhibition, curated by Richard Aitken, at the State Library of Victoria together with the accompanying book Gardenesque: A Celebration of Australian Gardening.

    Your affectionate child
    Pacita Alexander reveals the story of letters, found at Ellensville, from Mrs Rolf Boldrewood (nee Margaret Riley) to Ellen Foreman.

    Browned Off: Old Gardens in a New World
    Howard Tanner sums up the lecture programme at the 25 th Annual General Conference of the Australian Garden History Society, held in Sydney on 15 and 16 October 2004.

    Vale – John Brookes MC, 1921-2004
    Jane Lennon pays tribute to a founding member of AGHS.

    Much of interest in Edinburgh Gardens, Fitzroy
    Lorraine Nadebaum explains why Edinburgh Gardens are regarded as the ‘jewel in the crown’ within the City of Yarra.

    Abstracts

     Introducing Ipswich in Queensland Elspeth Douglas
    In this brief historical survey Elspeth Douglas mentions the discovery of limestone in the local area during the survey by Captain Logan in 1826-7 and the subsequent establishment of a convict outstation to quarry the limestone. A little later coal was discovered close to the Bremer River and it became the principal source of Ipswich’s prosperity, together with manufacturing, the Queensland Railway Workshops, gardening, service and administrative activities.

    Original inhabitants were the Jaggera people, followed by settlers from Britain and Ireland and from Europe, notably G e rmans. Chinese were also present cultivating market gardens. With a mean total of 126.6mm of rainfall in January and 43.5mm in July Ipswich offers some challenges for gardeners.

     Queens Park Ipswich Jan Seto
    In his survey grid for the town of Limestone (later re-named Ipswich) Henry Wade set aside Alma Square as one of the areas for public recreation. It was situated partially in what is now Queens Park, but a public meeting in 1858 called on the governor of New South Wales to grant the town a ‘Public Park, Recreation Ground and Botanic Gardens’ and this was indeed granted.

    By 1863 the park was fenced but little is known of its design. An early plan was provided by Walter Hill, curator of the Brisbane Botanic Gardens but has not survived, and on a visit to the park in 1876 Hill noted that his plan had not been followed. There was an ongoing struggle to acquire funding for maintenance of the park as by the end of the 1870s the government horticultural purse strings were being mightily stretched to cover the Queens Park network in Queensland which included parks in Toowoomba, Rockhampton, Maryborough, Gympie, Townsville and Warwick.

    Funding became a local problem when the Ipswich Municipal Council took over control of the Queens Park Reserve in 1893 and subsequently various local sporting groups based their activities in the park.

    Early curators of the park are mentioned – William Haylitt, Joseph Smith Lowis, Alexander Munro, George Jackson, Frederick Turley, and Thomas Wall. It was Turley who made the most significant contribution to Queens Park during his period as curator (1909 – 1935) and much detail of his work and that of Wall is given.

    The article concludes with comments on the situation of the park today.

    Japanese Gardens for Ipswich Chris Boulton & Rob Sewell
    Now nearing completion the Nerima Gardens in historic Queens Park have been designed in collaboration with Ipswich city’s sister city of Nerima in Japan. The aim of the garden design is to create ‘a place of peace and tranquility, a place to meet nature and calm the spirit’. The theme for the gardens draws its inspiration from the topography of the Ipswich area while exhibiting a Japanese style of landscape architecture.

    Nerima Gardens takes advantage of the existing vegetation and landform of the site in such a way that the visitor is taken on a journey of discovery where the perspective constantly changes and lightens the heart. The gardens reflect a picture of the local environment and illustrate how Ipswich fits within South East Queensland. The design portrays the distant ocean and the closer features of the Ipswich region, its rivers, mountain peaks and vegetation.

    Genesis of a historic garden – Part 2 Volkhard Wehner
    Volkhard Wehner lived a Folly Farm from 1978 to 1987. He analyses the development of the garden after the time when Edna Walling worked there and describes the contribution his father-in-law, Dr Leonard Cox, made.

    He discusses the original Folly Farm in Berkshire, England where Sir Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude Jekyll worked in 1906 and 1912, and makes an interesting analogy with the work of Edna Walling and Eric Hammond at Folly Farm, Olinda.

    Gardenesque - the book & the exhibition Reviewed by Howard Tanner
    These two wonderfully rich and rewarding accounts of Australia’s garden history – entwined in their preparation, but quite different in their outcomes – reveal Richard Aitken’s pivotal role in recent garden research and scholarship, and the pursuit of avenues which ensure public accessibility to this interesting material. Their starting point was the substantial resource of the collections of the State Library of Victoria, and then by exploring a wider pictorial base, they were able to convey the evolution of Australian gardening over time.

    The book is a pictorial triumph, while the exhibition – often of small, sometimes jewel-like items – is visually less successful. It is not well-served by its relatively bland institutional setting, which would have been better, in my view, transformed into a dark-hued Aladdin’s cave or a semblance of a conservatory.

    The book’s main pictorial section (and exhibition catalogue) is preceded by some touching Leunig cartoons and two very fine essays – a beautifully crafted and intimate account of Anne Latreille’s association with gardens and Paul Fox’s insightful analysis of gardening as an expression of changing Australian society.

    One of the most important aspects of the book and the exhibition is an emphasis on recent, post World War II history, conveyed by contemporary publications, posters and telling icons. While treasuring our past, Richard Aitken clearly shows us that we must recognize and nurture our present, and our future. One wonders who is collecting the telling sketches of Tom Sitta, Anton James, Craig Burton or Taylor Cullity Lethlean. In undertaking this review other profound images kept emerging from my memory, making me realize that, despite all our various endeavours, the definitive book on Australia’s gardens is yet to appear.

    Your affectionate child Pacita Alexander
    Recently discovered letters to Ellen Foreman and a book inscribed to her and found on the bookshelves at Ellensville, have brought to light correspondence from Maggie Browne, better known as Mrs Rolf Boldrewood, author of The Flower Garden in Australia. The letters highlight the social life of those living on many of the early homesteads of rural New South Wales.

    Maggie Browne, the god-child of Ellen Foreman, was brought up by her aunt Christiana Blomfield at Denham Court. The first letter, from a 14-year-old Margaret, is dated 1851. It refers to ‘ripe peaches’. For over fifty years, more or less frequently, letters from Margaret informed Ellen of moves, family news, social activities, fashions, travels and the making of gardens.

    Visits to Ellensville and Denham Court were made during the post-conference tour and visited viewed the original letters from Margaret Browne.

    Browned Off: Old Gardens in a New World
    Report of the 25 th Annual National Conference Howard Tanner

    Craig Burton’s talk gave important insights into the many layers of the Sydney region – the aboriginal regions, the geological regions, the pattern of rivers and the marine interface and the original pattern of native vegetation. One might ask ‘How can more of the original circumstance be regained? Surely this is a topic worthy of a future lecture.

    Tim Entwisle spoke of the history and evolution of the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney and their related scientific role emphasizing that they needed to consolidate their public standing and role across the several holdings, needed to recognize competing demands on the Gardens and the Domain and needed to plan for succession planting.

     Elizabeth Ellis spoke of the influence in early New South Wales of the Age of Enlightenment and the strong sense of commitment to a new life in the wilderness where the successful settlers sought to make their own version of Arcadia through what she termed ‘Acts of Possession’.

    James Broadbent related the story of his historic bungalow ‘The Cottage’ and how he worked to provide it with a setting evocative of colonial times.

    John Adam spoke of his study as a Fulbright Fellow of Californian gardens and gardening in the 1920s, in particular the career of Fred Tschopp who was active in both California and New Zealand.

    It would be worthwhile AGHS exploring this topic further as American influence in Australia during the 1920s was profound.

     Silas Clifford-Smith described the three National Trust Gardens he is responsible for – Everglades at Leura, the Norman Lindsay Museum at Falconbridge and Experiment Farm at Par r amatta – highlighting the current situation of limite d funding.

    Peter Nixon spoke of ‘best fit’ in selecting plants to suit Sydney’s growing conditions and moves to identify and market them through the Designers Growers Network – an important topic that deserves a more detailed explanation.

    David Gray discussed the issues related to credibly maintaining and presenting Vaucluse House as a 19 th century gentleman’s estate on poor soil in drought conditions.

     Gillian Davies outlined the illustrious career of the Colonial Botanist Charles Fraser, including his Scottish training and his collecting trips around New South Wales, Van Diemen’s Land, New Zealand, Norfolk Island and the Swan River.

    At the Conference Dinner, Peter Valder entertained with hilarious and telling vignettes c.1954 of a now vanished world of upper class gardening, with vast estates and numerous staff.

    Barbara Buchanan gave a most important insight into the ‘ Sydney School’ of landscape architects, who were active in the 1970s and 1980s: Bruce Rickard, Bruce MacKenzie, and most particularly, her former colleague and mentor, the late Harry Howard.

    Noel Merrick provided some most interesting statistics about water now, and in the future - 2.5% of the world’s water is fresh, 66% of that is ice and snow, 0.3% of the fresh water is held in rivers, lakes and reservoirs and 30% of the fresh water is ground water i.e. below the surface. Merrick spoke of the importance of everyone moving away from mains water, and thus the relevance of water storage tanks, and of the use of grey water for irrigation and secondary purposes.

    Speaking on ‘Gardens of Hope’ Helen Armstrong contemplated what gardens are and what they can be for us. They provide hope that one can start again. Philosophers had stated that ‘hope arises in a break with the past’, ‘hope is a joyful revolt’. She spoke of international garden festivals such as Chaumont in France, the restoration of the lost gardens at Heligan in Cornwall and of the Eden Project.

     Howard Tanner spoke of the need for institutions and professional bodies to re-invent themselves from time to time – by pursuing new initiatives and exploring avenues for enlarged memberships. Twenty-five years ago the English National Trust model provided a framework for Australian conservation bodies – he felt that it was no longer appropriate or applicable for Australia.

    The creation of exciting new contemporary landscapes, such as the public gardens at Mount Penang (by Anton James with Diana Pringle, Geoffrey Britton, Craig Burton and others), the new Sydney Harbour foreshore parks, or Craig Burton’s expansive native plantings across a valley in the Hunter region, while all in their infancy, could form the basis of a future conference, perhaps centred on Newcastle.

    Much of interest in Edinburgh Gardens, Fitzroy Lorraine Nadebaum
    Edinburgh Gardens, Fitzroy are regarded a the ‘jewel in the crown’ within the City of Yarra, representing the most significant heritage public garden in the municipality. The gardens were first set aside as a public reserve in 1862 and from the outset included designated areas for active recreations as well as ornamental passive parklands. The main layout and early planting was predominantly carried out in the 1880s. It includes extensive avenue planting of Dutch elm. Ornamental features that still grace the parklands include a rotunda bandstand (1925) and the charming Chandler drinking fountain. There has been repeated appropriation of parkland for a range of industrial and community service functions but a recently completed Conservation Management and a Master Plan will guide future work in the Gardens in line with contemporary community needs.

     

    Australian Garden History Vol. 16 No. 2 September/October 2004 -

    Contents

    Another Viewpoint
    Juliet Ramsay replies to Peter Cox's comments on the redevelopment of the rose gardens at Old Parliament House in Canberra.

    Rampart Gardens
    Scott Carlin explores a garden of early Sydney which will be visited during the Annual National Conference in October.

    The Genesis of a Historic Garden - Part 1
    Volkhard Wehner details Edna Walling's involvement in the garden at Folly Farm.

    Illusions of Grandeur
    Jela Ivanovic-Waters looks at 20th century floral displays in the Melbourne Town Hall and chronicles their development from the 1930s to the 1980s.

    Speaking with Suzanne Hunt
    Nina Crone talks to Suzanne Hunt, the driving force behind Gardenesque, an exhibition tracing the history of gardening in Australia.

    For the Bookshelf
    Murray Hohnen reviews Resurrection in a Bucket by Margaret Simons.

    Duntroon
    Nina Crone introduces a book about 'a place of simple purpose and frequent paradox'.


    Abstracts

    Another Viewpoint Juliet Ramsay
    Juliet Ramsay responds to Peter Cox's view on the redevelopment of the rose gardens at Old Parliament House in Canberra [Australian Garden History Vol. 16 No.1 July/August 2004]. She makes a comparison with the Carlton Gardens surrounding the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne, Australia's first historic site to be included on the World Heritage List. Ramsay argues that the character and function of the OPH Gardens have been changed by the installation of new features such as kitchen kiosks, pergolas, substantial tennis pavilion buildings, colonnades, fountains and a new external fence with massive concrete gate posts. Carlton Gardens, although absorbing some changes and refinements and deprived of the northern area, have retained their essential character as a 19th century garden setting for the Royal Exhibition Building.

    A Rampart Garden Scott Carlin
    In his article Scott Carlin traces the development of the site of Sydney's second Government House in the Inner Domain and more particularly the rampart garden which contributed to the romantic Gothic mood of the turreted and crenellated house. This western terrace garden has recently been re-instated through collaboration between the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, the Department of Commerce and the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney following proposals and work by Barry McGregor and Associates (1997) and Richard Aitken and Colleen Morris (1999)

    Illusions of Grandeur Jela Ivanovic-Waters
    This well-illustrated article focuses on the ephemeral visual art tradition popular in Melbourne's formal municipal affairs. Essentially of a commemorative nature the decorations cover such events as the Melbourne Centenary, the Coronation of George VI,
    and the 1956 Olympic Games. The author describes the production of floral decorations
    and their composition giving a brief account of the horticulturists involved in the displays.

    Genesis of a Historic Garden - Part 1 Volkhard Wehner
    Volkhard Wehner provides an account of Edna Walling's work on the garden at Folly Farm in the Dandenong Ranges near Melbourne during the late 1930s. He gives the early history of the property from the time the Reverend Edward Cox and his wife Isabella acquired it as a weekend cottage to the ownership of their son Leonard who came to understand the site during his convalescence from tuberculosis following service in World War I. In 1936 Leonard Cox engaged Edna Walling to design the garden surrounding the cottage and a detailed account of this work is given. A second design followed - that of the driveway that incorporated stone gate pillars constructed by Ellis Stones.

    Speaking with Suzanne Hunt Nina Crone
    An interview with the woman who has master-minded Gardenesque, a lively, informative and humorous exhibition showing the history of gardening in Australia. The piece highlights Hunt's vision for placing garden history on the agenda for serious scholarly research through the establishment of a garden history archive at the State Library of Victoria. Thereafter the subject is brought to the attention of the general public through a popular exhibition and an associated publication.

    Book Reviews

    Resurrection in a Bucket by Margaret Simons - reviewed by Murray Hohnen

    Duntroon: An Artist's Impression by Vivien Dwyer - reviewed by Nina Crone


    Australian Garden History Vol. 16 No. 1. July/August 2004 -

    Contents


    Viewpoint
    Peter Cox further discusses the renewal of the gardens at Old Parliament House in Canberra.

    A growing work of art
    Tanya Crothers and Darani Lewers recall the making of an artist's garden at Emu Plains.

    Books briefly
    Trevor Nottle finds pleasure in The Great Hedge of India and Nina Crone recommends Harriet Edquist's work Harold Desbrowe-Annear: a Life in Architecture.

    Burnley Gardens
    Lee Andrews traces the history of the first horticultural school in Australia.

    Speaking with Paul Fox
    Nina Crone hears about the genesis of Clearings, a forthcoming book that will excite all readers interested in Australia's landscape and garden history.

    Items of Interest and Notice of the Annual General Meeting

    Diary Dates.

    AGHS People
    Helen Page pays tribute to Dr Sophie Ducker, AM.


    The support of the Victorian Branch in sponsoring four additional colour pages in this journal is greatly appreciated.


    Abstracts

    Viewpoint by Peter Cox
    Responding to Max Bourke's article 'Does conservation really matter' [Australian Garden History Vol. 15 No. 4 February/March/April 2004 pp.4-6] Peter Cox, who advised the National Capital Authority on the refurbishment of the gardens at Old Parliament House, puts the case for the planned changes. He argues "Far from the Old Parliament House Rose Gardens 'melting away with the best intentions' they are destined to become a significant planting of roses."

    A Growing Art Work
    By Tanya Crothers and Darani Lewers
    The daughters of Margo Lewers, who made the garden that is now the Penrith Regional Art Gallery, give personal insights into the way their mother and father developed the Emu Plains property purchased in 1941. Principles that guided the plantings included a wish to create a total environment by integrating indoor living areas with outdoor gardens and courtyards and the creation of more shade and shelter to ameliorate the effects of the dusty, hot, westerly winds that blew across the plains. As teenagers, the Lewers girls were reluctantly drawn into their mother's vision

    Burnley Gardens
    By Lee Andrews
    A 12-page history of the Burnley Gardens, site of Australia's first horticultural school, the comprehensive account traces the growth of the horticultural and experimental grounds established in 1861 by the Horticultural Society of Victoria. The early layout of the grounds is described together with the vicissitudes experienced, before the Victorian Government took control of the Gardens in 1891. An account is given of Charles Bogue Luffman's decade (1897-1907) as principal of the School of Horticulture, the emerging emphasis given to agriculture, the changes that followed World War II, the landscape design work of Emily Gibson and Ellis Stones, and the teaching of amenity horticulture in the 1980s. New challenges arose in the 1990s when a section of the site was sold to AMRAD Pharmaceuticals and the Gardens became part of the University of Melbourne.

    Interview: Speaking with Paul Fox
    Nina Crone interviews the author Paul Fox about his new book Clearings which analyses the development of a colonial view of Landscape through studies of significant Australians - Sir William Macarthur, Thomas Lang, Daniel Bunce, William Guilfoyle, Josiah Mitchell and William Ferguson. The book identifies four different types of clearing: the nursery, the botanic garden, the farm and the forest, placing them in the context of Australian history. The discussion also touches on things that influenced the book's thesis, and the evolution of the author's methods of research. Finally Paul Fox reveals his plans for further works.


    Australian Garden History Vol. 15 No. 5 May/June 2004 - People and Gardens

    Contents

    A unique opportunity
    Jan Gluskie reveals one of the treats at the forthcoming Annual National Conference.

    Living at Bickleigh Vale
    Caroline Hohnen hears about life at Bickleigh Vale, the Edna Walling settlement at Mooroolbark that has recently been added to the Victorian Heritage Register.

    An Adelaide garden: Dulwich House
    Wendy Joyner and Cas Middlemis trace the history of Dulwich House and the present garden that reflects mid-20th century domestic horticultural traditions. View Dulwich House Plant List

    Charles Draper of Charnwood, Arthur's Creek
    Bruce Draper introduces a pioneer fruit grower and describes his contributions to Victorian horticulture.

    For the bookshelf.
    Christine Reid discusses the rose books of Charles Quest-Ritson and Trevor Nottle reviews Grounds for Pleasure - Four Centuries of American Gardens.

    Items of interest

    Diary dates

    Congratulations
    In Hobart, Nina Crone meets Lauren Black, winner of the inaugural Margaret Flockton Award for Botanical Illustration.

     

    Abstracts


    A Unique Opportunity
    Jan Gluskie
    Delegates to the Annual National Conference in Sydney in October will not only hear about 'Gardening in Sydney's West' from Dr James Broadbent, former senior curatorial advisor of the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, they will visit this eminent historian's home and garden in the foothills of the Blue Mountains. The Cottage, at Mulgoa, was built for Lieutenant William Cox in 1810 and is Australia's oldest house in private occupation. Dr Broadbent and his family have owned The Cottage for about 30 years and have maintained it as an old house keeping its condition stable by conservation, not modernization. They have also replanted the gardens and orchard.

    Living at Bickleigh Vale
    Caroline Hohnen
    Nine years ago John and Gillian Isbel bought Glencairn, one of the properties on the estate at Mooroolbark developed by Edna Walling in the late 1930s. Since then John has worked with his neighbours to preserve and maintain Wallings's spirit and intentions for the gardens of Bickleigh Vale. John tells writer, Caroline Hohnen, about the Walling principles that he applies to looking after the gardens at Bickleigh Vale and discusses Walling's favourite plants. He outlines the challenges facing an aging garden, the implications of Heritage Register listing and the reasons for this.

    An Adelaide garden: Dulwich House
    Wendy Joyner and Cas Middlemis
    Built in the early 1880s by Robert Huckson who also built Martindale Hall, Dulwich House was eventually purchased by the Hopkins in the 1940s. Now aged 90, Joan Hopkins has faithfully maintained the garden, virtually unchanged, for 60 years. A detailed account of the garden is given with an accompanying plan. The plant list is available from the AGHS office. Interesting background references are given on South Australian rosarians (the Ross family), and on garden ornaments such as urns and fountains. The article offers a comprehensive insight into mid-20th century Australian gardening;

    Horticultural Pioneer: Charles Draper of Charnwood, Arthur's Creek
    Bruce Draper
    A detailed account of the life and work of a versatile horticulturist noted for his fruit, much of which gained prizes in national and international exhibitions in the 1880s. Charles Draper (1825-1909) was active in community work and contributed to the establishment of the experimental gardens at Richmond (later the Burnley Horticultural College). Draper's property, Charnwood, was a showpiece attracting many visitors who flocked to see not only the orchard but also the vineyard, the nuttery and a renowned collection of begonias.

     

    Volume 15 Number 4 March/April 2004 - Conservation

    Contents

    Does Conservation really matter?
    Max Bourke discusses the challenges of conservation and advocacy in relation to the gardens at Old Parliament House in Canberra.

    Going into 'A Gardener's Labyrinth'
    Christine Reid describes an exhibition that gave rise to a book.

    Meeting water conservation in landscape design
    Juliet Ramsay profiles Glen Wilson's design for Ainslie Village as a notable example of handling water in the Australian context, describing the subtle changes to design that occur over time.

    Bouquets for the Governor's Lady - Part 2
    Glenn Cooke details the place of flowers in the culture of Brisbane with a study of still life paintings of the 1930s.

    The Waite Arboretum
    Jennifer Gardner and David Symon trace the history of a notable Adelaide research centre highlighting its changing role in relation to the community.

    For the Bookshelf
    Howard Tanner sets a challenge in his review of A Gardener's Labyrinth, Trevor Nottle analyses the work of Paul Bangay in a review of The Balanced Garden and Nina Crone recommends Interwar Gardens.

    Items of Interest & Diary Dates

    Vale: The Williamson Garden 1930-2003
    David Jones files an obituary for a significant Walling garden in Adelaide.

     


    Abstracts

    Does conservation really matter?
    Max Bourke
    'Is the detail of the management of historic gardens something we should be concerned about and if so, how? Citing the Burra Charter Max Bourke analyses the practices of the National Capital Authority in the 'recent restoration of the Old Parliament House Garden to the 1930s design' claiming that: 'Neat orderly designs "imagined" by the NCA and their advisers were not the historic fabric that is being lost."

    Going into A Gardener's Labyrinth
    Christine Reid
    This light-hearted, behind the scene, account of the opening of a notable photographic exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in London, records some of the gardening personalities attending the occasion as well as its 'funny moments'.

    Meeting water conservation in landscape design
    Juliet Ramsay
    This assessment of the Glen Wilson's implementation of water conservation in landscaping through above ground drainage and water detention at Ainslie Village in Canberra highlights the seminal influence of Wilson on Australian landscape design. The writer also discusses the fact that the management manual written by Wilson was not strictly followed and this resulted in changes over the years. The article cites other examples of 'water harvesting' in Australia and overseas, and urges its application to domestic gardens through detention ponds.

    Bouquets for the Governor's Lady - Part 2
    Glenn Cooke
    Through an in-depth study of the place of flowers in still-life paintings of the 1930s, Glenn Cooke offers an insight into the artistic culture of Brisbane during that decade. He laments the fact that so few of these paintings have found their way into public collections. Apart from a strong representation of Vida Lahey, there are only another four examples in the Queensland Art Gallery. Cooke provides a comprehensive list of paintings to reveal the fashions in garden flowers - native and exotic - during the period chosen for his study.

    The Waite Arboretum - Past and Future
    Jennifer Gardner and David Symon
    Two curators of the Waite Arboretum have collaborated on this account of a notable Adelaide research centre, describing the original gift of land and money to the University of Adelaide. Attention is given to the arboretum records, the memorial trees, the contributions of the curators, the publications put out, the phases of development and the future directions, particularly TREENET which is a not-for-profit collaborative project involving anyone with an interest in the selection, production, establishment and care of street trees.

     

    Volume 15 Number 3 November/ December 2003/January 2004 - Focus on Queensland

    Contents

    The plant lists at Mooleric and Turkeith
    John Hawker comments on the plant lists for two gardens with 'a Guilfoyle influence', updating them and highlighting the species uncommon in Victoria.

    Bouquets for the Governor's Lady
    In the first of a two-part study, Glenn Cooke considers the place of flowers on public occasions and in the visual arts during the 1930s in Brisbane.

    On Tour: Discovering the Darling Downs and Bunya Mountains - Part 2
    Marie Hollingworth, Joan Low and Stuart Read continue their account of the pre-conference tour led by Trisha Dixon.

    Tropical pleasures
    Professor Catherin Bull sums up the papers presented at the 24th Annual National Conference held in Brisbane, 10-12 July 2003, and Nina Crone records aspects of gardens visited during the conference.

    Traces of the past
    Bruce Hargreaves uncovers the colourful past of Thomas Park, Indooroopilly, site of Brisbane's famed Bougainvillea Gardens.

    For the bookshelf
    Stuart Niven reviews New Conversations with an Old Landscape by Catherin Bull, and Nina Crone recommends a useful reference booklet from the National Trust of New South Wales.

    Items of interest & Mailbox

    Diary dates

    New award to honour botanical illustrator
    Margaret Flockton, whom J.H. Maiden appointed as Botanical Illustrator in 1901, receives recognition in a new award for botanical art.

    Abstracts of Feature Articles

    Bouquets for the Governor's Lady - Part 1
    In his study of the place of flowers in the Brisbane art scene during the decade 1930-1940 Glenn
    Cooke details the sprays and corsages, the decorative floral arrangements at art exhibitions, the curiosities (a quilt made of the ribbons from the bouquets presented to Lady Goodwin), and the pottery and embroideries adorned with floral motifs. The artists producing these works usually modelled their designs on, or created their floral displays from, flowers grown in their own gardens, but unfortunately few records of such gardens have survived.

    Discovering the Darling Downs and Bunya Mountains - Part 2
    This is an account of a visit to Old Gowrie station (dating from 1869) and of time spent in Toowoomba - at Queen's Park (notable for its Agathis robusta, Bhutia capitata and Cinnamon camphora), at Philip Skinner's Town Garden (three terraced areas on the escarpment) and at the Toowoomba Art Gallery (admiring the impressive 'Hemispheres of Light' exhibition). Of considerable interest was Cloudlake at Ravensbourne where Richard and Rosemary Jones aim to be self-sufficient in sustainable organic farming. There is a Mediterranean garden surrounding the house and beyond the lake is a lush rainforest.

    Tropical Pleasures.
    Professor Cathrin Bull reports on the papers delivered at the 2003 National Conference viz. Dr Jean Sim (the notion of tropicalia), Catherine Brouwer (the Acclimatisation Garden at Bowen Park), John Taylor (Rockhampton Botanic Gardens), Bruce Perrott (a family nursery), Glenn Cooke (Oasis Gardens), Jinx Miles (Paronella Park), Dr Dinah Hansman (gardening in the dry tropics), Judith Mackay (Ellis Rowan), Maurice Wilson (the 'Queenslander' garden), Dr Jane Lennon (the Scenic Rim), Kate Green (Marina Mirage and Couran Cove), and Ross McKinnon/Malcolm Bunzli (Harry Oakman).

    Garden visits - brief accounts of the following gardens: the Roma Street Parklands, Fernberg at Bardon, the Hundscheidt Garden at Sunnybank, Tallaringa Gardens at Mount Tamborine, Mount Cotton Rainforest Garden, the Everingham property at Yandina, the Maroochy Bushland Botanical Garden, the Dalziel Garden at Buderim, 7 Orme Road, Buderim (a bromeliad garden), and Trafalgar House, Buderim.

    Traces of the Past
    Bruce Hargreaves, a student at the Grovely College of TAFE, gives the history of Thomas Park, Indooroopilly - once the site of a well-known Brisbane tourist attraction of the 1930s and 1940s, the Bougainvillea Gardens. An insight into the changing use of the park by local residents and details of remnant plantings are given.

    New Award to Honour Botanical Illustrator
    A brief account of the work of Margaret Flockton whom J.H. Maiden (Director of the Botanic Gardens in Sydney) employed as Botanical Illustrator in 1901. She remained at the Gardens for 27 years contributing images for Maiden's Critical Revision of the Genus Eucalyptus, the Forest Flora of NSW and for his Opuntia.

     

     

Vol. 15 No. 2 September/October 2003 - Celebration and Conservation

Contents

Rescuing the 1920s garden at Nutcote
Howard Tanner gives an account of early contributions to the restoration of Nutcote.

On Tour: Discovering the Darling Downs and Bunya Mountains - Part 1
Marie Hollingworth, Joan Low and Stuart Read describe the highlights of the pre-conference tour led by Trish Dixon.

Mooleric and Turkeith
To celebrate the centenary of William Guilfoyle's design for the garden at Mooleric Suzanne Hunt and Anne Colman trace the fascinating connection between two neighbouring properties at Birregurra.

Threatened roses
Following an overseas study tour Patricia Toolan puts the case for saving the plants, particularly roses, in Australia's cemeteries.

Review
Conserving our Cemeteries, edited by Celestina Sagazio.

Fruition
Dyan de Wekker recall a tree that made a lasting impression on her as a child.

Items of Interest and Diary Dates

The Mallee, Mildura and Mungo
Sue Clabburn reports on the inland trip led by Rodger and Gwen Elliot.

Abstracts of Feature Articles

Rescuing the 1920s Garden at Nutcote
Howard Tanner describes the early background to the work of saving and restoring Nutcote, May Gibbs' house and garden. May Gibbs died in 1969 and left the property to UNICEF. It passed through various hands before being saved from redevelopment through the intervention of concerned citizens and purchase by the North Sydney Council. Details are given of the contributors to the Conservation Management Plan for the property, prepared by Architects Howard Tanner and Associates.

On Tour: Discovering the Darling Downs and Bunya Mountains - Part 1.
This account of regional history and early pastoral settlement on the Darling Downs of Queensland includes descriptions of Coochin Coochin (1843) near Boonah, Canning Downs (1840s) near Warwick, where Edna Walling's niece, Barbara Barnes, resides, and Jimbour House (1874) near Dalby, where two mature bottle trees still impress visitors. There follows an impression of the vegetation of the Bunya Mountains, and some interesting facts about Araucaria bidwillii that gave the mountains their name.

Turkeith and Mooleric
Suzanne Hunt and Anne Colman celebrate the centenary of William Guilfoyle's work at Mooleric in Victoria's Western District by examining his designs private gardens while employed as Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne. Drawing on Guilfoyle's plant lists, sketches and letters, together with the farm and family records of the neighbouring properties Mooleric and Turkeith, they highlight the features of Guilfoylean design in these gardens. The account of Guilfoyle's membership of the Kalizoic Society gives some insight into the prevailing desire to aesthetically enhance colonial society.

Threatened roses
South Australian Patricia Toolan was awarded a Churchill Fellowship to study preservation, conservation, and strategies for saving old roses and plants in cemeteries. Following visits to the USA, Italy, France, Germany and the UK she returned home determined to raise public awareness of the significance of cemetery plantings and the need to save them. She discusses ways she hopes to achieve this.

Fruition
A student of cultural resources management, Dyan de Wekker vividly recalls a much-loved tree of her childhood. In a personal reminiscence she observes the changing seasons, the produce of the tree, the vicissitude of tree-climbing and the eventual senescence of the apricot tree.

The Mallee, Mildura and Mungo
In April 2003 Rodger and Gwen Elliot led an excursion the into the north-west corner of Victoria and over the border to Lake Mungo in NSW. Sue Clabburn records impressions of the diverse places visited - Walpeup Dry Country Memorial Garden, the Pink Lakes National Park, the Millawa Memorial Garden and Heritage Village at Meringur, the Australian Inland Botanic Gardens, Mungo National Park (part of the World Heritage area of the Willandra Lakes) and the important conservation site of Ned's Corner on the Murray River.

 

 

Vol. 15 No. 1 July/August 2003 - The Continuing Story

Contents

Restoring a Garden in the Image of its Creator
Helen Wood tells how she restored the garden at Nutcote, the home of artist and children's storyteller May Gibbs

Yesterday's Gardens for Today's Children
Nina Crone visits Rippon Lea and talks to Phil Tulk about the ideas behind an interesting garden for children.

With Mirrors and Rainbows - Part 2
Ken Duxbury continues the story of Edward William Cole with an account of his garden publications and his years at Earlsbrae Hall in Essendon.

Charles Bogue Luffman: the final years
Sandra Pullman concludes her series on the work and life of Luffman with reference to his public lectures, his writing and his garden design at Killamont.

For the Bookshelf
Paul Thompson: Australian Planting Design
Jennifer Bennett: Lilacs for the Garden
Mary Ellis: People and Plants: A History of Gardening in Victoria

Items of Interest

Diary Dates

Abstracts of Feature Articles

Restoring a garden in the image of its creator
Helen Wood describes how she endeavoured to incorporate the spirit and whimsy of May Gibbs in the work she did on the garden at Nutcote. She read diary entries recording the work May and her husband, James Ossoli Kelly, did in establishing the garden in the 1930s and she familiarised herself with characters from May's books - Snugglepot and Cuddlepie, Little Ragged Blossom, the Big Bad Banksia Men, Little Obelia and Prince Dande Lion. Illustrations from Nutcote's archives illustrate the article.

Yesterday's gardens for to-day's children
In her memoirs Clara Webster (née Sargood) describes the fun she and her three brothers had in the first garden at Rippon Lea in the 1870s. Nina Crone finds the recreated Children's Garden, established at Rippon Lea in the late 1990s on the basis of Clara's descriptions, reflects the enlightened views of a colonial mother on children and gardens.
She continues with an account of Gertrude Jekyll's views on gardens for children in Edwardian England, suggesting Jekyll's book Children and Gardens is still a delightful and worthwhile reference for today's generation of gardening parents.

With mirrors and rainbows - Part 2
Ken Duxbury continues his account of the gardening publications of Edward William Cole, notably The Happifying Gardening Hobby, setting it in the context of Cole's philosophical ideas. He gives an account of Cole's own garden, with its enormous rainbow bed at Earlsbrae Hall (now Lowther Hall Anglican Grammar School) in Essendon.

Charles Bogue Luffman - Part 3
Sandra Pullman concludes her study of Charles Bogue Luffman with an account of Luffman's lecture on the design for the new federal capital city, later published as
The Agricultural, Horticultural and Sylvan Features of a Federal Capital. She highlights the differing views of Luffman and Walter Butler on garden design and describes Luffman's work at Killamont, near Kyabram. A brief account of Luffman's life after his period as Principal of Burnley is also given.

 



Vol. 14 No. 6 May/June 2003
Gardens and Children

Contents

Gardens, Books and Children
Nina Crone considers how public gardens have catered for children over the years.

The Ian Potter Foundation Children's Garden
Nina crone describes an innovative addition to the Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne.

Charles Bogue Luffman: the Burnley years.
Sandra Pullman finds an anonymous poem that describes Luffman's experiences as principal at Burnley College.

For the Bookshelf
Marion Pennicuick reviews The Prairie Spirit in Landscape Gardening by Wilhelm Miller with an introduction by Christopher Vernon.

With Mirrors and Rainbows
Ken Duxbury begins a two-part article about energetic, eccentric Edward William Cole and his contribution to garden publiching.

Vale
Florence Elizabeth (Beth) Bond.

Items of Interest

On-line

 

Abstracts of Feature Articles

Gardens, Books and Children.
A garden is often where a child first experiences freedom to explore, wonder, daydream and indulge curiosity, and the way public gardens have catered for children over the years makes an interesting review. Many places had 'Peter Pan' gardens, others had fairy trees and wishing wells, some concentrated on areas for physical activity providing swings and roundabouts. Popular children's books inspired statues of characters as focal points. At the beginning of the 20th century in Australia many schools provided children with gardening experience, and in the 1980s Brooklyn Botanic Gardens developed a special program and garden for children.

The Ian Potter Foundation Children's Garden
This garden at the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne is due to be opened in autumn 2004. Its emphasis is on offering a stimulating environment for self-discovery adventures by children. A plan and cross sections of the garden show the imaginative
way children will be encouraged to discover things. The Education Unit at the RBG Melbourne has based its programs on sound educational theory and artists, writers, and sculptors have served as consultants. The garden has an iconic statue representing the characters from Norman Lindsey's The Magic Pudding.

Charles Bogue Luffman
Part Two: The Burnley Years 1897-1908
Appointed Principal at the Burnley School of Horticulture in 1897 Luffman's first challenge was to improve the grounds. He introduced the less formal design principles advocated by the natural landscape school of William Robinson and Gertrude Jekyll, but applied it to Australian conditions. There was conflict between the impulsive and headstrong Luffman and his Horticultural Board as well as trouble with the Minister for Agriculture. The result was that Luffman resigned in 1907. An anonymous poem from the Burnley College archives gives an interesting account of the troubles. After his resignation Luffman completed his design work for the Metropolitan Golf Course in Melbourne.

With Mirrors and Rainbows
Edward William Cole personified the individualism and entrepreneurial spirit of the late nineteenth century boomtown of 'marvellous Melbourne'. Self-educated and interested in books Cole set up a remarkable book arcade in the heart of the city, extending it as property came on the market. A feature of it was a fernery where footsore citizens could rest and peruse his stock of books. Cole loved flowers and gardens and published a number of books on gardening and horticulture. He was ahead of his time in appreciating the potential of skilful advertising and a sense of what the general public wanted in the way of books.

 

Vol.14 No. 5 March/April 2003 Interpreting Landscapes

Contents

In my Mother's Footsteps: the musings of a subtropical gardener
Nancy Tow introduces the delights of a garden in South Eastern Queensland.

Re-engaging with the Land: designed cultural landscapes
In her key-note paper from the 2002 Annual Conference Jane Lennon discusses how Australian regards their landscapes, the adoption of World Heritage assessments of landscape, and the application of cultural landscape categories in Australia.

Charles Bogue Luffman: the early years 1862-1897
Sandra Pullman begins a series of articles on the man whose Garden Principles for Australia was published in Melbourne one hundred years ago.

Valete
Tributes to John Dwight, Helen Bagot and Caroline Simpson

Items of Interest

Diary Dates

On Tour: The Golden Landscapes of Clunes, Creswick and Talbot
Nina Crone reports on a weekend tour by the Victorian Branch

 

Abstracts of Feature Articles

Nancy Tow
In my mother's footsteps: the musings of subtropical gardener

Nancy Tow gives a personal account of the distinctive character of a 40-year old garden at Wellington Point on the coastal plain of South Eastern Queensland. She describes the hazards of gardening in lush conditions, where 'mangos in their thousands fall from trees like shrapnel onto roofs'. Inherited from her parents it developed into a habitat for wildlife and has much loved sections such as the Woodland Glade, the Secret Garden, and the iconic Hills Hoist (now covered with various creepers). A personal perspective on the philosophy and value of gardening is offered together with details of the species contained in the garden.

For 17 years Nancy Tow gardened on a balcony overlooking Sydney Harbour. The change to an acre at Wellington Point in Queensland allowed her passion for plants to develop on a broad scale.

Jane Lennon AM
Re-engaging with the land: designed cultural landscapes

In her key-note paper delivered at the 23rd Annual National Conference held in Hobart in October 2002, Jane Lennon discusses how Australians regard the landscape, the adoption of World Heritage assessments of landscape and the application of cultural landscape categories to Australia and Tasmania. Examples discussed include the Villa d'Este at Tivoli, Italy (a Designed Landscape); Cinque Terre, Italy (a Continuing Landscape); Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, in Australia's Northern Territory (an Associative Cultural Landscape); and Purnalulu in the Eastern Kimberley area of Western Australia. The views of the Australian Heritage Commission are examined in relation to Woodlands Historic Park at Tullamarine, near Melbourne and to Wilsons Promontory National Park, Victoria. The paper concludes with a consideration of the work of the Tasmanian Heritage Council at Port Arthur; and the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.

Jane Lennon is currently an elected member of the Council of the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property in Rome (ICCROM), an adjunct professor in Cultural Heritage Studies at Deakin University and an Australian Heritage Commissioner.

Sandra Pullman
Charles Bogue Luffman
Part One: the early years 1862-1897

In the first of a three-part account of the life and work of Charles Bogue Luffman, Sandra Pullman details his English origin, his charismatic nature and appeal to women, and his experience in the dried fruit industry in Spain, Italy and France. In 1895 Luffman migrated to Australia and was employed by the Victorian Government in the Department of Agriculture.
He gave evidence to the Mildura Royal Commission, set up to inquire into whether Mildura was a suitable site for growing dried fruits.

Charles Bogue Luffman
Part Two: the Burnley Years 1897-1909
appears in Australian Garden History Vol. 14 No.5

Charles Bogue Luffman
Part Three: a contributor to Australian horticulture
appears in Australian Garden History
Vol. 15 No. 1.

Sandra Pullman, an undergraduate student at Burnley College, University of Melbourne, is a member of the Landscape Committee of the National Trust (Victoria). She contributes articles on garden history to the 'Age' and is particularly interested in the work of early Burnley graduates.

 

Vol.14 No. 4 January/February 2003
New Designs for Old Gardens

Contents

A Garden to Commemorate the Centenary of Federation
Robert Griffin writes of the competition for a new garden at Sydney's Go vernment House

Geelong's 21st Century Gardens
John Arnott provides details about the renewal of Geelong's Botanic Gardens
A Small Landscape with Great Meaning
Torquil Canning discusses memorial gardens in relation to the Port Arthur Historic Site

C.F. Newman and Sons - Adelaide Nurserymen
Cas Middlemis follows the changing fortunes of a hard working South Australian family

Jimbour House
Gloria Cumming introduces the garden of an old Queensland pastoral property

For the Bookshelf
Paul Fox reviews The Oxford Companion to Australian Gardens and Trevor Nottle recommends Rooted in History - Studies in Garden Conservation

The 23rd Annual Conference in Hobart
John Taylor sums up the lecture program and Nina Crone records the garden visits

Items of Interest

Diary Dates

On Tour: Tasmanian Gardens of the North and North-West
Nina Crone finds some noteworthy gardens in northern Tasmania during the post-conference tour.


Abstracts of Feature Articles

Robert Griffin
A Garden to Commemorate the Centenary of Federation

A discussion of the Sydney Government House Conservation and Management Plan sets the scene for an account of the Design Competition initiated by the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales. The article includes the design intent submitted by the winning team - Room 4.1.3 (Project Team: Vladimir Sitta, Richard Weller, Nathan Greenhill & Tom Griffiths).

Robert Griffin who is Curator at Government House Sydney was project manager for the design competition.

Geelong's 21st Century Garden

A description of a major extension to the Geelong Botanic Gardens that acknowledges the changing aspects of public and botanical gardens and also re-focuses attention on Daniel Bunce's 19th century garden integrating the Geelong Botanic Gardens more prominently into the life of the city of Geelong. The account includes details of plantings and a concept plan of the garden designed by Chris Dance Land Design.

John Arnott, Director of the Geelong Botanic Gardens, provided material for this article.

Torquil Canning
A Small Landscape with Great Meaning

A consideration of the complex issues involved in developing a suitably sensitive memorial to the tragic assassination of 35 people at the Port Arthur Historic Site in the broader context of managing one of the major Australian historic landscapes. The article touches on the challenges of involving community participation in planning and need for a Social Impact Study.

Torquil Canning is a Tasmanian landscape designer who worked with the Port Arthur Memorial Committee to develop a fitting tribute to those caught up in the massacre that occurred on 28 April 1996.

Cas Middlemis
C.F. Newman and Sons - Adelaide Nurserymen

Charles Newman arrived in South Australia in 1846 from Germany as an 11-year-old. By the age of 20 he had purchased land and financed the establishment of a nursery through his efforts as a builder. 'One of the finest in the state' his nursery at Water Gully included market gardens, and an orchard and his shop in Rundle Street sold fresh flowers and seeds of all kinds. Today the extensive foundation ruins of the Newman nursery can still be seen nestled within the Anstey Hill Recreation Park at Tea Tree Gully.

Cas Middlemis developed an interest in garden history while living in England. Cas contributed a number of West Australian entries to The Oxford Companion to Australian Gardens while living in Perth. She now lives in Adelaide.

Gloria Cumming
Jimbour House

Situated 27km from Dalby in Queensland Jimbour House was originally settled by Richard Sougall in 1841. It was sold to Thomas Bell in 1845 and it was he who commissioned the impressive homestead in French Renaissance Style, completed in 1877 after his death. The Bell family was associated with Jimbour for 68 years before it was sold in 1912 to the Russell family. Designed by Henry Stokes, the garden has some impressive trees planted by the Bells late in the 19th century. A notable feature is the palm-studded lawn to the south of the house. Citrus, pome and stone fruit trees in the orchard and a flourishing vegetable garden provide food for the kitchen.

Gloria Cumming lived on Jimbour Station while teaching in schools on the western edge of the Darling Downs. Now retired she pursues her passion for Australian history and architecture.

 

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