Gender and Space in Rural Britain, 1840-1920

(Jacob Rumans) #1

Notes to pages 120–3 179



  1. 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.

  2. W. Goldring, ‘Munstead Wood’, Garden, 22 (August 1882), p. 562.

  3. G. Jekyll, ‘Some Plants From Algeria’, Garden, 19:483 (1881), p. 202.

  4. 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.

  5. W. Robinson, ‘Tiarella Cordifolia’, Garden, 22:555 (8 July 1882), p. 21.

  6. J. Loudon, Botany for Ladies (London: John Murray, 1842).

  7. Jekyll, ‘Flowers and Plants in the House’, Garden, 20:519 (29 October 1881), p. 449.

  8. 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.

  9. 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.

  10. 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.

  11. Loudon, Botany for Ladies, p. vi.

  12. 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.

  13. Festing, Gertrude Jekyll, p. 219.

  14. 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).

  15. 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.

  16. Festing, Gertrude Jekyll, p. 181.

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