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The Pleasure Gardens of Virginia: From Jamestown to Jefferson
 
 
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The Pleasure Gardens of Virginia: From Jamestown to Jefferson [Paperback]

Peter Martin (Author)

Price: $29.50 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

November 22, 2001

Using a rich assortment of illustrations and biographical sketches, Peter Martin relates the experiences of colonial gardeners who shaped the natural beauty of Virginia's wilderness into varied displays of elegance. He shows that ornamental gardening was a scientific, aesthetic, and cultural enterprise that thoroughly engaged some of the leading figures of the period, including the British governors at Williamsburg and the great plantation owners George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, William Byrd, and John Custis. In presenting accounts of their gardening efforts, Martin reveals the intricacies of colonial garden design, plant searches, and experimentation, as well as the problems in adapting European landscaping ideas to local climate. The Pleasure Gardens of Virginia also brings to life the social and commercial interaction between Williamsburg and the plantations, and examines early American ideas about gracious living.

While placing Virginia's garden tradition within the larger context of that of the colonial South, Martin tells a very human story of how this art both influenced and reflected the quality of colonial life. As Virginia grew economically and culturally, the garden became a projection of the gardener's personal identity, as exemplified by the endeavors of Washington at Mount Vernon and Jefferson at Monticello. Martin draws upon both pictorial representations and the findings of modern archaeological excavations in order to recapture the gardens as they existed in colonial times.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This scholarly monograph is eminently readable. Tracing the history of gardens and gardening in Virginia from its earliest days in the 1600s--when few colonial gardeners recorded their efforts--Martin, professor of English at New England College in England, concentrates on the gardens of Williamsburg (as the seat of government and the "focus of colonial civilization and culture") and those of John Custis and William Byrd, Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. The trials and frustrations of tilling ground with a climate so unlike Mother England's make interesting reading; it is fascinating to look back to a time and place when so many uncertainties confronted the would-be gardener. A chapter on Mount Vernon and Monticello is filled with horticultural details available only because both ardent gardeners left explicit--and graphic--information. Pleasure Gardens is not, as Martin notes in his preface, a book to be used by the amateur garden restorer to lay out a colonial-style garden. It is instead a volume that goes "some way toward reconstructing a world almost completely lost to us." Illustrated.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

Eminently readable.... The trials and frustrations of tilling ground with a climate so unlike Mother England's make interesting reading; it is fascinating to look back to a time and place when so many uncertainties confronted the would-be gardener.

(Publishers Weekly )

Martin shows that... Virginians were experimenting with all sorts of imported and, increasingly, native flora... as a means of expressing themselves and their places in the new world.

(Virginia Quarterly Review )

Martin's book is a first of its kind. By drawing on a wide variety of new material, by considering the development of gardening in Virginia as an entity, and by applying his skills as a garden historian, Martin has brought into sharp focus a crucial era of American gardening. Partly because it is so well written, and partly because of its subject, this volume [has] a wide appeal.

(John Dixon Hunt, Professor and Chair, Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning, University of Pennsylvania )

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On one of the first days after his landing in the New World in May 1607, George Percy, a member of the original Jamestown settlement, excitedly recorded seeing in the forests, fields, and swamps "ground all flowing over with fair flowers of sundry colors and kinds, as though it had been any garden or orchard in England."1 Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
scape garden, den history, plant exchanges, kitchen gardening, adjacent landscape, plantation gardens, serpentine walk, north garden, grass plat, restored gardens, garden book, pleasure gardening, colonial gardens, college gardens
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mount Vernon, Green Hill, Carter's Grove, George Tucker, Palace Green, Bassett Hall, Sabine Hall, John Custis, Nomini Hall, Joseph Prentis, William Byrd, Bodleian Plate, Gunston Hall, Robert Carter, Mount Airy, Thomas Jefferson, Duke of Gloucester Street, Nicholson Street, David Meade, George Wythe, Tazewell Hall, Von Closen, Francis Street, Frenchman's Map, New York
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