Notes to pages 120–3 179
- Festing, Gertrude Jekyll, p. 93. In September 1877, the visitor’s book lists the arrival of a
wagon of fruit trees, although the fi rst known plan of the garden was not created until
1883. M Tooley, ‘Calendar’, in Tooley and Arnander (eds), Gertrude Jekyll: Essays on
the Life of a Working Amateur, pp. 206–24, on pp. 213–15. Th e main fl ower border at
Munstead House was 160 by 14 feet (48.77 by 4.27 m). Festing, Gertrude Jekyll, p. 114. - W. Goldring, ‘Munstead Wood’, Garden, 22 (August 1882), p. 562.
- G. Jekyll, ‘Some Plants From Algeria’, Garden, 19:483 (1881), p. 202.
- G. Jekyll, ‘Flowers and Plants in the House’, Garden, 20:519–28 (1881), pp. 449, 471,
489, 510, 532–3, 554, 573, 574, 617, 637; G. Jekyll, ‘Flowers and Plants in the House’,
Garden, 21:529–53; 556–8; 560–70 (1882), pp. 7, 29, 47, 65, 85, 102–3, 119, 135, 151,
167, 185, 205, 221, 241, 261, 281, 297, 317, 333, 353, 373, 391, 411, 429, 449; G. Jekyll,
‘Flowers and Plants in the House’, Garden, 22:556–8, 560–70 (1882), pp. 53, 75, 102,
150, 172, 193, 214, 236, 246, 279, 289, 319, 330, 363. - W. Robinson, ‘Tiarella Cordifolia’, Garden, 22:555 (8 July 1882), p. 21.
- J. Loudon, Botany for Ladies (London: John Murray, 1842).
- Jekyll, ‘Flowers and Plants in the House’, Garden, 20:519 (29 October 1881), p. 449.
- G. Jekyll, ‘Wild Flowers in the House’, Gardening Illustrated, 4:158; 161; 163; 167; 171;
172; 174; 176; 177; 182; 190 (1882), pp. 25, 61, 85, 133, 182, 194, 223, 241, 253, 313,
409. - G. Jekyll, ‘Colour in the Flower Garden’, Garden, 22:562; 575 (1882), pp. 177, 470–1;
Jekyll published seventy-eight articles and books on the subject of colour throughout her
life. See Ericsson-Penfold, ‘Victorian Women and the Meaning of Flowers’, Appendix
XVII: Gertrude Jekyll’s Publications on Colour. - G. Jekyll, ‘Daphne indica Planted Out’, Garden, 22:576 (1882), p. 477; G. Jekyll, ‘Narcis-
sus Monophyllus’, Garden, 22:585 (1883), p. 115; G. Jekyll, ‘Anemone Fulgens’, Garden,
23:591 (1883), p. 245; G. Jekyll, ‘Ornithogalum Nutans’, Garden, 23:596 (1883), pp.
362–3; G. Jekyll, ‘Anemone Spennina’, Garden, 23:596 (1883), pp. 362–3; G. Jekyll,
‘Androsace Carnea’, Garden, 23:598 (1883), p. 400. - Loudon, Botany for Ladies, p. vi.
- 11 July 1899. Tooley examines the viola in M. Tooley, ‘Plants Selected and Bred by Miss
Jekyll’, in Tooley and Arnander (eds), Gertrude Jekyll: Essays on the Life of a Working
Amateur, pp. 127–44, on p. 144. - Festing, Gertrude Jekyll, p. 219.
- G. Jekyll, Lilies for English Gardens: A Guide for Amateurs (London: Country Life &
George Newnes, 1901); G. Jekyll, Wall and Water Gardens (London: Country Life &
George Newnes, 1901). - G. Jekyll, ‘Althaea Ficifolia’, Garden, 57:1268 (1900), p. 3; G. Jekyll, ‘Narcissus Pallidus
Praecox’, Garden, 57:1475 (1900), p. 148; G. Jekyll, ‘Hardy Vines for the South of Eng-
land’, Garden, 57:1479 (1900), p. 225; G. Jekyll, ‘Narcissus Pallidus Praecox’, Garden,
57:1480 (1900), p. 246; G. Jekyll, ‘Cosmos Bibinnatus’, Garden, 57:1492 (1900), p. 462;
G. Jekyll, ‘Formal Gardening Merging into Free’, Garden, 58:1505 (1900), p. 223–4; G.
Jekyll, ‘Field Flowers in the House’, Ladies Field, 10:118 (1900), p. 13; G. Jekyll, ‘Cut
Flowers in the House’, Ladies Field, 11:131 (1900), p. 68; G. Jekyll, ‘Wild Flowers in
the House’, Ladies Field, 11:140; 143 (1900), pp. 400, 546; G. Jekyll, ‘Winter Window-
Boxes in London’, Ladies Field, 11:144 (1900), p. 36; Jekyll Commissioned Garden
Design. Camilla Lacing, Dorking, Surrey, 1900, Reef Point Gardens Collection, Envi-
ronmental Design Archives at University of California, Berkeley, fi le 1, fol. 18. - Festing, Gertrude Jekyll, p. 181.