From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Tankard, Judith
Tankard, Judith
9/08
JUDITH B. TANKARD
LANDSCAPE HISTORIAN
1452 BEACON STREET
WABAN, MASSACHUSETTS 02468
617-965-4167
EMAIL: judith@tankard.net
FAX: 617-965-8067
Judith B Tankard - Home Page
Page 1 of 1
Judith B. Tankard, Landscape Historian
Home
Books
Articles & Reviews
Lectures & Events
About
Info
Links
Contact Us
Judith B. Tankard is a landscape historian, author, and
preservation consultant. She received an M.A. in art history from
the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and has taught
at the Landscape Institute, Arnold Arboretum of Harvard
University, since 1987. In 2000, she was awarded a Gold Medal
by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society for her role in the
advancement of historic New England gardens.
She is the author or co-author of seven illustrated books
on landscape history, including her most recent publications,
Beatrix Farrand: Private Gardens, Public Landscapes and Gardens of
the Arts and Crafts Movement: Imagination and Reality. A Place of
Beauty: The Artists and Gardens of the Cornish Colony won a Quill
and Trowel Award from the Garden Writers Association in 2001
and The Gardens of Ellen Biddle Shipman was recipient of a 1998
book award from the American Horticultural Society. Her books
have been supported by grants from the National Endowment
for the Arts, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in
the Fine Arts, and the Hubbard Educational Foundation.
Judith's articles and book reviews have been published in
Antiques, Apollo, Arnoldia, Country Life, Horticulture, Hortus,
Landscape Architecture, Old-House Interiors, Old-House Journal,
Pacific Horticulture, and other publications, and for ten years she
served as editor of the Journal of the New England Garden History
Society. She is currently publications editor of the Beatrix Farrand
Photograph: Eric Roth
Society. In addition, she has prepared cultural landscape
histories for the Garden Conservancy, Historic New England,
and other organizations. A popular lecturer in the United States and Britain, Judith is a frequent speaker
at symposia and conferences devoted to the preservation of historic landscapes, pioneer landscape
designers, the Arts and Crafts Movement, and other topics relating to her research.
Judith gardens in the Boston area and on Martha's Vineyard, but her passion is visiting other
people's gardens. She occasionally leads small groups to visit some of her favorite gardens in Britain.
Read an interview with Judith conducted by The Cultural Landscape Foundation.
C 2009 Judith B. Tankard. All rights reserved. I Privacy Policy I Contact Us
http://www.judithtankard.com/
6/18/2009
Judith B Tankard - Books
Page 1 of 7
Judith B. Tankard Landscape Historian
Home
Books
Articles & Reviews
Lectures & Events
About
Info
Links
Contact Us
Books
Forthcoming
Beatrix Farrand: Private Gardens, Public Landscapes (The Monacelli
Press/Random House, 2009).
Long recognized as one of America's most celebrated landscape
architects, Beatrix Farrand was renowned for her private estate gardens
as well as her work as a landscape consultant for prestigious private
universities and colleges. This book is a fresh presentation of her
remarkable career and includes a number of landscapes that have
recently been restored. A visually appealing book, it has over 200
illustrations by well-known photographers. Books will be available on
September 29, 2009.
Previously Released
A Legacy in Bloom: Celebrating a Century of Gardens at the Cummer,
photographs by Mick Hales (Cummer Museum, 2008).
It tells the stories of the Cummer family and the gardens they
cultivated in Jacksonville, Florida. The gardens represent a plumb line
through the history of American landscape design, with direct ties to
four leading designers and firms: Michigan-based Ossian Simonds,
Philadelphia's Thomas Meehan & Sons, Ellen Biddle Shipman of New
York, and the renowned Olmsted firm of Massachusetts.
Read the press release.
To order, telephone 904-356-6857 or email studor@cummer.org.
Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement: Reality and Imagination
(Abrams, 2004).
Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement documents the history of
the movement's diverse attitudes toward landscape architecture for the
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Judith B Tankard - Books
Page 2 of 7
Garden o the and Crafts Movement
first time. The author brings a fresh perspective and a wealth of original
research to her subject, one of the most creative periods in the history of
modern design. Richly illustrated with period watercolors and drawings,
as well as new photographs and garden plans made especially for this
publication, this book promises to be an important resource for art and
design historians, and a delight to all lovers of gardens.
What the critics say:
Tankard
writes SO well, and the illustrations are SO well chosen, than one is soon swept up and away
into an idealized world of the early Arts and Crafts designers
[it] is the best-illustrated study so far.
Apollo
Between generous quantities of photographs and period drawings illustrating scores of examples, the
author weaves in the experience of the Arts-and-Crafts aesthetic with examples of wallpaper designs,
textiles, and evocative watercolours that faithfully convey the period's horticultural obsessions.
Country Life
The book will engage all those interested in the making of beautiful gardens, but especially those with a
particular enthusiasm for
the Arts and Crafts Movement. The Garden
Judith B. Tankard
has written the most comprehensive study to date of Arts and Crafts gardens.
Style 1900
It is such a valuable addition to garden design literature. Her selection of period watercolors and drawings,
plans and new photography lays a solid foundation for an enlightening look at the
house and garden
championed by Arts and Crafts notables such as Sir Edwin Lutyens. Veranda
Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement gives a vivid account of the range of Arts and Crafts gardens,
[but] what the book does best is [to] present the gardens in the context of art, architecture and furniture.
Garden Design
This important book is impressive and fascinating. House & Garden
This is a superb read and an extremely well-designed and illustrated book. The Telegraph
Tankard's text is a model of scholarship, insight, and efficiency. The insightful text, well-chosen images,
and
the book's overall design will engage and inspire. Landscape Architecture
This book will be attractive to all garden lovers. Its scholarly depth, extensive notes and bibliography
ensure it will be an essential text for all who study this period of design. Garden History
Co-author with Alma Gilbert, A Place of Beauty: The Artists and
A PLACE OF BEAUTY
Gardens of the Cornish Colony (Ten Speed Press, 2000).
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the artists' colony in
Cornish, New Hampshire, was considered one of the most beautifully
landscaped villages in America. The lush, rolling hills and fairy-tale
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6/18/2009
Judith B Tankard - Books
Page 3 of 7
scenery drew some of the nation's most gifted artists, including sculptor
Augustus Saint-Gaudens, illustrator Maxfield Parrish, and architect
Charles Platt. These artists, inspired by the colony's pastoral beauty,
quickly became renowned as much for the idyllic gardens created as for
their works of art. A Place of Beauty was a winner of a Quill and Trowel
Award from the Garden Writers of America.
What the critics say:
For a view into the history of early 20th -century American gardens, this lively and detailed description of
an influential segment makes enjoyable and informative reading. Gardens Illustrated
Judith Tankard examines in detail a dozen Cornish gardens, some modest, some grand, but each perfectly
suited to the larger landscape. Her pithy discussions are bolstered by a wealth of illustrative material,
historical photographs, and many reproductions of paintings, etchings, and planting plans. Hortus
This book
chronicles the gardens, gardeners, and art of this golden place and period.
American Gardener
This is a book filled with ideas from another century that are still workable today, because of the talent of
the garden makers. Charleston [West Virginia] Gazette
The numerous photos and reproduction of paintings that fill the book show a world filled with an
astonishing beauty rarely seen in our modern world. Amazon.com
Gertrude
Co-author with Martin Wood, Gertrude Jekyll at Munstead Wood:
JEKYLL
Writing, Horticulture, Photography, Homebuilding. Foreword by
Graham Stuart Thomas (Sutton/Sagapress, 1996).
This book presents insight into the life of the great English
gardener Gertrude Jekyll and her home at Munstead Wood. As well as
describing the building and development of the house and garden, the
authors look at the arts she practiced while at the house. Her daily
routine, the running of the household, and her relationships with
household and garden staff is gained through the eyes of those who
worked under her direction. Jekyll's important work as a nurserywoman
and market gardener, her aptitude for business, and the promotion of
gardening through her writing is also described.
What the critics say:
It is a pleasure to take in one's hands Gertrude Jekyll at Munstead Wood, a book that is beautifully
produced, appealingly laid out, copiously illustrated, and elegantly written.
Journal of the New England Garden History Society
A detailed look at the previously unexplored artistic life and business acumen of one of the most influential
garden designers of this century. A must for understanding the woman, her work, and her time.
American Gardener
The authors' enthusiasm for their subject is evident, and the book is invaluable not only as a study of a
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6/18/2009
Judith B Tankard - Books
Page 4 of 7
remarkable individual, but also as a description of a contemporary way of life. Country Life
The authors have drawn together a range of sources to describe the many interests and activities which
filled Miss Jekyll's life at Munstead Wood. the text is Jekyllian in tone, often paraphrasing her writings
to give a well-rounded picture. The Garden
Well illustrated, highly detailed, and meticulously researched, this book is likely to prove indispensible to
Jekyll fans. The Countryman
This book is a very readable, interesting account of a fascinating woman who undoubtedly altered the way
the Western world gardens. Traditional Gardening
Gertrude Jekyll at Munstead Wood is a book for any admirer of this legendary figure [and] provides
intriguing insight into her life. Gardens Illustrated
GARDENS
The Gardens of Ellen Biddle Shipman. Introduction by Leslie Rose
ELLEN BIDDLE. SHIPMAN
Close. (Sagapress/Abrams/Library of American Landscape History,
1996).
The Gardens of Ellen Biddle Shipman tells the story of a remarkable
woman who contributed much to the development of landscape design
in America. Hailed as the "dean of American women landscape
architects," Ellen Shipman designed over 600 gardens between 1914 and
1946. Her clients included the Fords, Astors, du Ponts, and other captains
of industry and patrons of the arts. The book describes Shipman's
remarkable life, her years in the artists' colony in Cornish, New
Hampshire, and her long association with architect Charles Platt. The
book explains Shipman's artistic approach to the design and planting of
a garden, which was completely American in spirit and impact. The
Gardens of Ellen Biddle Shipman was a recipient of the American
Horticultural Society's 1998 book award.
What the critics say:
This book
describes how a woman rose to the top in the male-dominated profession of landscape
architecture. American Gardener
The text is fascinating, historic, and poignant. New York Times
Tankard provides thorough and illuminating descriptions of Shipman's gardens
it is a handsome book,
valuable not only to historians and garden designers, but also to every garden maker.
Pacific Horticulture
Tankard's text is concise and engaging. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians
Co-author with Michael Van Valkenburgh, Gertrude Jekyll: A Vision of
Garden and Wood. Foreword by Jane Brown (Abrams/Sagapress, 1988).
A series of extraordinary photographs taken by the great English
landscape designer Gertrude Jekyll presents a unique look at her own
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Judith B Tankard - Books
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GERTRUDE JEKYLI
garden at Munstead Wood. In these beautiful pictures, reproduced for
Vision of Ganlai and Wood
the first time in newly made prints from her private albums, Jekyll's
masterpiece is revealed as she saw it. The text provides an enlightening
discussion of her design ideas, which have never been fully explored
before. The book is published in conjunction with a major exhibition of
Gertrude Jekyll's photographs that traveled to galleries and museums in
the United States and Britain. The book was selected by Publisher's
Weekly as an Editor's Choice for 1989.
What the critics say:
An intimate portrait of [Jekyll] in her surroundings [shown in] a collection of eighty-four of her own
photographs. Times Literary Supplement
This book is a gem of production. World of Interiors
The photographs are beautifully produced and the book handsome and well-researched.
Garden History Society
[An] elegant and appealing volume. The New Yorker
With its glistening gray dust jacket punctuated by stunning black-and-white photographs, this volume is a
winner on looks alone. Colonial Homes
[The book] is a treat
a lovely compilation from the 2,100 photographs of [Jekyll's] own garden.
New York Times
Other Publications
"William Robinson and the Art of the Book," in Hortus Revisited: A
HORTUS
Twenty-first Birthday Anthology, ed. David Wheeler (Frances Lincoln,
Revisited
2008).
An anthology of original articles from Hortus, the renowned
quarterly publication founded by David Wheeler in 1987 and illustrated
by Simon Dorrell and other artists. "For the past two decades Hortus has
been a voice of wide-ranging intelligent cultural debate on all matters to
do with gardens and gardening." Monty Don
"Ellen Biddle Shipman's Colonial Revival Garden Style," in Re-
Creating the American Past: Essays on the Colonial Revival, ed.
Richard Guy Wilson, Shaun Eyring, Kenny Marotta (University of
Virginia Press, 2006).
This comprehensive and handsome volume recovers the origins,
characteristics, diversity, and significance of the Colonial Revival,
situating it within the broader history of American design, culture, and
society.
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Judith B Tankard - Books
Page 6 of 7
Re-resting the American Past
"Gardening with Louise," in My Mother's Garden: A Collection about
My
+
Love, Flowers, and Family. Introduction by Penelope Hobhouse
MOTHER'S
(Chamberlain/Penguin, 2005).
GARDEN
Countries Assign
Lane Havian
"My mother was a pistol. Everyone who knew Louise considered
Fashion
her a character. She always spoke her mind, especially in later years
when her tongue rolled forth with a flow of admonishments about
people not doing things 'right.'" Other contributors include Barbara
Kingsolver, Dominique Browning, Diane Ackermann, and Jamaica
Kincaid.
ENGLISH PLEASURE
"Introduction," English Pleasure Gardens by Rose Standish Nichols
GARDENS
(David R. Godine, 2003).
When English Pleasure Gardens was first published a century ago,
it was instantly acclaimed as a resource for gardeners, tourists, and
history lovers alike. This new edition will introduce a new generation to
the pageantry of Britain's garden heritage and to the redoubtable Rose
Standish Nichols, who hailed from Boston's Beacon Hill, was among our
earliest professional garden designers, and was nationally recognized for
RUSE STANDISH NICHOLS
her expertise with native plants and residential garden design. Nichols
brings to her subject a deep knowledge of garden history and an incisive
critical eye that still resonates today. Visit the Nichols House Museum on
Mount Vernon Street in Boston.
Contributor, Encyclopedia of Gardens: History and Design, ed. Candice
Shoemaker (Routledge/Chicago Botanic Garden, 2001).
This three-volume resource provides information on garden
history and design in the United States and around the world, ranging
from Joseph Addison to Zen gardens. It is illustrated with hundreds of
photographs, plans, and drawings.
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Judith B Tankard - Books
Page 7 of 7
SAKEER
GARDENS
History Design
Pioneers of American
Contributor, Pioneers of American Landscape Design, ed. Charles
Landscape Design
Birnbaum and Robin Karson (McGraw-Hill, 2000).
In this book, the reader is introduced to the geniuses and more
ordinary people who helped shape American landscapes and public
spaces, thereby establishing the United States as a leader in landscape
design, planning, and conservation. Many renowned landscape
historians and educators helped compile biographies of 160 key people.
A second volume is planned for publication in 2010.
If you would like an autographed copy of any of these books, contact me at
books@judithtankard.com
C 2009 Judith B. Tankard. All rights reserved. I Privacy Policy I Contact Us
http://www.judithtankard.com/books.html
6/18/2009
P
October 1.2 Tried To get a Kodale of group
mg of should in pont of Oldfathy Two wd
email round lilac bushes in either side
OF The pont door, an or for r/lee standing
back in a corner made by The L, backed by
Tar or Three large white spruces. a lary e
lilac by The Kilchen Turn, & a ky jap on The
right of The approach Two magnotias
out of Ray but a good Pinis mughs very
effective the epinees at The entrance To
the garden are very effective & have grown
well. O.callsa was my stocking in spring
&
early summer with its red young shoots.
Q.Dauglasi does not seem as yet To be a
ple book(Q. tomentora I. Ian Houtlee very
great m provement on The common etce-
graceful with an adicinture like leaf, Q Cra- I
Tegifolia looked a bit mothealen, while
robasTa was carrying out its name well
mon door- yard kind about here, I. Then
foria was Thrifty & seems To be The can-
bengii(?) had grown enomously & was very
preling
its feathery plumage. I. callosa
& 0. Thun very is are of a yellower green
than The other Kinds men Tuned In The
Oct 12,1893
Design Archives, new of camb, Berkeley Courtesy Tankard of Judith
Beatrive gmes "Book of Gardening, 1893-1895" Environmental
2
7
garden! itself I learned that the Eulatia gra
cillissima had untered perfectly without
the slig httso covering. The perennial Helian
thus had gone, it has been extremely handsome
te size of a large black - eyed leason what
about seven feet high a mass of bloom of about
var.
:
The holly hocks, & before
them, the larkeper have been very good a.-
gainsh a socid baull ground of arbor or lac
hedge. Aralia epinosa is very us beful during
the summer, perfectly hardy, blooms in large
umbels at the tap of the Throu at a height
of 10-15 feet, & in The aulumn the foriage
Lig remum eblenders is in full flower The
Turns a deep proven & the leaves fall early.
allum (prace of very handsome & The latest
stacks about four ft. in height, also L. epecican
aurutums in feel bloom in The rhododen drom
bed. Locide a semperviews, grown from seed
stared last winter is now magnificient aiths
planting from ff To 15 ms, apart is crowding
too much. aster house Ang line is also in fill
glory 9 seems To improve vastly under cane.
The exposure is edouth weah & very warm. auter
cricoides is very lovely Too being very full flow
3.
Gred seights I compervisens 2 T-4 ft a.
Govae Anglial, 18 ins to 31/2 fit a encor di
78ths To S ft a beautiful aster grous about
21/2 ft high at its best, has pacesh mauve
rays & reddy disk flowers, heads very fell,
sinable var (?)
& flower about 1/2 or 2 ins aeros very de-
Ipiraea
has last-au its leaves is most
una ghtt The lea BuckThan botanical
name not known(?)
Ralice
folia is a good shree and The foliage
is still bright & pretty, ih has a Tree like
habit, The leaves are a gray green beneast &
the Twig. I are 9 The Deulzia Pride
of RochesTer seemed to be doing very well, &
cambine with The finer leaved weigelia
sain to be effective The colum times are
new unsightly as They leave a Teft of orean
leaves after the Hower stalls ur
pang even primulal has been very Irrhind in in The gar-
den this seem met, having a five jingered
leaf & Throwing its bunch of viltenfly like
bink flowers (a idea like honey
Quulle I about four ft high The loarlet
trumper honeysuckde ones The borch has small
T3.
4
9
which
bunches of scarlet benes all over ih, A make ih as
effective as in the blooming leason. am much
disappointed in Vibronium opcelers The bernes
hardly make up for The leafness clalks & gen
was a very hands me Vi becomum in the Oldfam
erally The worse for wear look of the leaves There
garden however, a compant shrub about founds
in height with lead blue berries, glosey foriage
which was much in dented in wavy lines, that
V. dentalum ? Canus languenca has first been
is not sharply Derrated. Could ih have been
plan Ted out This year, & is growin 9 well, the
question is whether it will be hardy ?
lymphonicarpus vulgans is now very pretty,
October 15. notived The coloring of The leaves
a Gracefey habit in a Chaub 2 ft his,
more beauti feel Than before This season be-
fire we left day before yesterday went To.
Oldfarm where There was u perfect compos
action. The prominent objects in The in
me diate foreground were a paper birch
and a while spruce. The birch had Tearned
a deep gold, & against The white spruce
was a beautiful piece of coloring The
Trees along The Oldfarm water font are quite
16 Spinasa apaciforia
cratary jour
S.robinta
S.Van Houthei,
S. Doughai,
S. callosa
S. Thundergii
tall so that one cannot see Their coach
line, This seems To give The effect of quite a
were on Top, of a cliff, & so gives the hill on
big drop, That is, it Looks as Though The Trees.
which the house attands more height The
me ddle ais Tance is the blue water with on
Porcuspine, with its black cliffs, This is carried
the left- / Pointe d 'Acadie & on The right Poura
5
on
To the Three next Porcupines & on The hargan
lie the goulds boro hills. The view is not seen
all at once, & The line of the foreground
distance. Looked at The B. V.I nurery
are as invegular as Those of of the hills in The
The chrous look well with the excep Tion of
Rhus cotenus, which although a handsome
small shrub 2-3 ft bean the marks of
severe winterKilling. Ordered 3 by ringas,
no var. marked, ired, 2 white weigelian
/ Rhes cotinus 2 Lonicera fragran traing
2 Deutzia, 3 epinea callbsa. in all 14 35
Things to be planted in beas, Brade This
face, according To ag seen ent with B.F.
tar Taric a, 2 Lonicera pagrantisime
Higgins. go / coust of porchatonics
2 Lonicha a grandifing Bed ru2 - 3
roza rugosa alba, 5 Rosa ruga sa rulsa,
5 Roza multiflora, 3 Roza rubic ino sa, &
the three large freshes from old bed Bed
no 3. 50 Lilium datented
inches apart Bed no 4- 2 Apiraia acrbi-
focia Bed no 5 - 3 Berberis vulgans, 2
Berberis canadensis, 4 Berberis Thember
gil- Bed no 6_ - 2 spirata Then bengii,
6
nlyonga parica / we gelia candida
Rices cotinues, 2 Deutzias as, / real, / white
Bed'no 7. 3 epiraia callosa, 3 Ryringa,
this last, has got TEn thoug out. In the
weigelia. - much Tc be much of a my in
Train the nept day noticed a good ar-
top of the hid was quite bare, but around
rangement of grees on a hillside The
from one came a Dort of garland
side
of Trees, beginning will- white fine, &
caming down To the deciduous Trees with
me Two specimen hamlocks on The owen's
edge. The Populus grandindentala was
a pear yellow, & looked as if laden with
hill near the station in Bangon, were
Druit. Two American elms on Top of a
magnificent in the urna, Their branches
whin lung, & the leaves all gone. But The
farther count one gets, The more one misses
the Tongues of dark green of the evergreens
cidevous. weds 12 The Huckle verry that was
which set off the Mazing color of the de-
so magnificant in ito paiches of go
Agency red & dark manoon ?
The Tracery of The birches, especially B pop -our
Presentation March 2002 Chicago Bolarical garden. glencer, IL.
www talf org cont-papers htm
Women Take the Lead in Landscape Art
:
[B.7arrand]
Judith B. Tankard
This paper is based on a presentation given at the Cultural Landscape Preservation
Symposium, Chicago Botanic Garden, on March 15, 2002. It concerns a few of the remarkable
women who helped shape the American landscape in the early years of the profession by working
largely in the arena of residential garden design. The names Ellen Biddle Shipman, Marian
Cruger Coffin, Beatrix Jones Farrand, and Martha Brookes Hutcheson will be familiar to
preservationists and landscape historians, but there are scores of other women whose careers
remain elusive due to lack of extant gardens, archives, or writings by and about them. The title,
"Women Take the Lead in Landscape Art," is taken from a 1938 feature in The New York Times
that profiled female trailblazers in the field of landscape architecture. Headlines, such as "Field is
Dominated by a Group of Brilliant Designers of Horticultural Vistas," "Countrysides Made
Over," and "Saga of Feminine Achievement Tells of Miracles on Estates, Parks, and Fair
Grounds," attest to the newsworthiness of the topic. In addition to highlighting the achievements
of these women, the feature also revealed their struggles for identity, including some of the
obstacles they had encountered: the social stigma of entering a profession and the practicalities of
obtaining training, landing clients, and managing a viable practice
Ellen Shipman summed up the situation for the Times in her statement, "before women
took hold of the profession, landscape architects were doing cemetery work
until women took
up landscaping (she said), gardening in this country was at its lowest ebb. The renaissance of the
art was due largely to the fact that women, instead of working over their boards, used plants as if
they were painting pictures. Today women are at the top of the profession."
1
Gaining recognition for their work, however, was slow to come. It is important to
remember that Shipman and other "trailblazers" began their professional lives in an era when
women were stereotyped as guardians of the home, and gardening was tacked onto the cult of
domesticity. Louise Shelton's Beautiful Gardens in America (1915), for example, included
designs by numerous women, but failed to identify the names of the designers, both male and
female. In general, magazine articles and books of the 1910s and 1920s clearly show that
sophisticated planting design not only had its place in landscape architecture, but was almost
entirely a woman's domain. The Boston architect Guy Lowell once commented that "a woman
will fuss with a garden in a way that no man will ever have the patience to do. If necessary she
will sit on a campstool and see every individual plant into the ground."
The early 1900s had seen an explosion of interest in home gardening through the
publication of popular books, such as Helena Rutherfurd Ely's A Woman's Hardy Garden (1904)
and Mabel Osgood Wright's The Garden You and I (1906), that were aimed specifically at
women to inspire them to channel their excess creativity into gardening. Social historian Alice
Morse Earle, author of Sundials and Old Roses, Old-Time Gardens Newly Set Forth (1901), and
numerous other books on antiquarian themes, codified what we now call the Colonial Revival
Garden. These gardens, identified by their geometric, four square layout and flower borders filled
with "old-fashioned" plants, provided the stylistic underpinings for Shipman and other designers.
In 1893, Mariana Griswold Van Rensselaer's Art Out-of-Doors: Hints on Good Taste in
Gardening brought aristocratic recognition to gardening arts in this country. A highly respected
art and architectural critic, Van Rensselaer defined the landscape gardener as "a gardener, an
engineer, and an artist, who like an architect considers beauty and utility together." Charles
2
Eliot's lukewarm review of her book questioned the perceived limitations of her viewpoint. He
wrote, "Ever since man became man he has been remodelling the face of the earth, but it is to be
regretted that no general account of either the breadth or the depth of the subject is to be found in
this book
good 'out-of-doors' must be founded in rationality, purpose, fitness.
the
essentially virile and practical nature of the art and profession is ignored." Virility versus
femininity in landscape design would dominate the formative years of the profession.
One of the main issues that women had to deal with was one of Attitude. As landscape
architect and historian, Diane Kostial McGuire, has written, Beatrix Jones Farrand (1872-
1959) "was spoken of disparagingly at an ASLA meeting by one of her male colleagues as a
woman who had 'a bedroom practice' where she turned out a little work occasionally between
cards and tea." In 1894, Frederick Law Olmsted, in his oft-quoted quip, dismissed Farrand (then
Miss Jones) as a someone "inclined to dabble in landscape architecture." Today Farrand has
acheived near legendary status as America's premier female landscape architect. By setting high
professional standards, ranging from the running of her office to the saving of her plans and
drawings SO that enlightened preservation and maintenance of her work might be accomplished,
Farrand paved the way for other women to follow in her footsteps. Farrand worked for some of
the most elite families of the day, including the Rockefellers in Maine and the Blisses at
Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C., the two most visible examples of her work today. In
addition, the publication of Farrand's Plant Book for Dumbarton Oaks has been an invaluable aid
in preserving her work.
Farrand, who came from a prominent family with many important artistic and social
connections, including her aunt Edith Wharton, was able to prepare for her career through travel
3
abroad and private study with Charles Sprague Sargent, founder of the Arnold Arboretum,
Boston, who advocated women taking up callings that brought them into the "healthy open air."
But what options were available for like-minded women from less genteel families? Beginning in
1901, the Lowthorpe School of Landscape Architecture for Women in Groton, Massachusetts,
offered practical training in gardening arts, while the Pennsylvania School of Horticulture for
Women in Ambler followed suit in 1910. A few years later the Cambridge School was founded.
In the early 1900s "landscape gardening" was the preferred term used by women. Farrand,
for example, referred to herself as a "landscape gardener" in the Reptonian sense, not a landscape
architect. "A young woman would shrink affrighted from the thought of meddling with anything
SO ambitious as landscape architecture conceives herself quite capable of mastering the art of
landscape gardening," wrote one journalist in 1908. Even by 1916, when an article on the
Lowthrope School appeared in House Beautiful, the idea of women taking up landscape
gardening as a career was still not regarded seriously. "Perennial borders filled with flowers and
girls" and other captions for the article expressed the attitudes of the day regarding working
women. "The man in this feminine paradise does not seem to be suffering.
the proper kind of
feminism-he leans on his rake while the girls dig the trench" and "at these sloping tables are
drawn and rendered to be technical those plans of gardens that look too good to come true"
would not have appeared in an article about the Olmsted office.
In the early 1900s a stigma about "working women" persisted. Occupations for a well-
brought-up woman from a good, but not wealthy family, were restricted to nursing, writing,
education, and similar, socially acceptable pursuits. Women from the higher social echelons were
encouraged to channel their excess energy into charitable endeavors. Landscape architect
4
Annette Hoyt Flanders (1887-1946), for example, worked for many years before charging fees
for her work.
In 1900, when Martha Brookes Hutcheson (1871-1959) announced to her family that
she wanted to take up landscape design and, worse still, wanted to attend the new program at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, they pleaded with her to change her mind about attending
a technical school, with its inherent social ostracism-they even offered to send her to Europe
and give her a free hand in designing the family property. "I was fired with the desire.
in spite
of the fact that it was considered almost social suicide and distinctly matrimonial suicide for a
woman to enter any profession," she said. She walked around the block three times before she
could bring herself to climb "those awful steps" (as she called them) to MIT. Fortunately she did
and was able to receive exceptional training in Beaux-Arts design and planning principles under
the direction of Guy Lowell. But even Lowell did not wholehearatedly encourage women to take
up the profession: "don't go into it unless you simply can't keep out," he advised.
Within a year of attending MIT, Hutcheson landed a number of important commissions in
the Boston area that confirm her prediliction for classically inspired layouts that resulted from her
training in the MIT program. The Lowthorpe program, in contrast, concentrated on simple garden
layouts, planting design, and maintenance. Hutcheson is also important because she detailed her
work in her book, The Spirit of the Garden (1923), which was recently hailed as the "first
account by a woman practitioner to combine a discussion of design with an extensive visual
presentation of her own work." A number of Hutcheson's commissions, including Maudesleigh,
the Frederick Moseley estate in Newburyport, Massachusetts (now Maudsley State Park), and
Longfellow House Garden, in Cambridge, Massachusetts (now a National Park Service site) are
5
undergoing rehabilitation, thanks to an increased awareness of her work.
Marian Cruger Coffin (1876-1957), another first-rate designer in the same league as
Hutcheson, also attended MIT as a special student, graduating in the Class of 1904. She was one
of only a handful of women to complete the program before it was discontinued a few years later.
In speaking about the profession, she told an interviewer, "unless a woman has capital, or
influence, or is able to get into a good office, she is very foolish to take up the profession as a
means of support." After finishing their studies, women found that the male-dominated design
firms would not hire them, another significant hurdle they encountered; presumably women
disrupted the morale of male workers or were considered unable to prepare construction
drawings or supervise field work. "It is hard to get a start," Coffin claimed, "as there is a
prejudice in many offices against employing women.
A woman has to solve many problems
and learn the ropes entirely by herself, while a man has the advantage of long office training and
experience."
Coffin promptly opened up her own office, accepting commissions that can be traced to
invaluable family connections, such as the duPont family at Winterthur, where her
comprehensive scheme involved an exceptional degree of design responsibility, going well
beyond the limitations of garden design. Despite a recent biography of Coffin, her work remains
somewhat fragmentary, the exception being Gibraltar, the former Rodney Sharp estate, in
Wilmington, Delaware, which has recently been restored.
Unlike, Farrand, Hutcheson, and Coffin, all of whom pursued careers as young women,
Ellen Biddle Shipman (1869-1950) came from another track. In 1910, when she was in her
early forties and living in rural New Hampshire, Shipman took up a career to support herself and
6
her children. Her Main Line Philadelphia family reputedly was not thrilled with her decision to
take up garden design as a career. Because she was homebound and unable to attend the
Lowthorpe School, she trained informally with the country house architect Charles A. Platt.
Shipman proved to be an extraordinarily gifted planting artist based on years of hand's-on
experience in her country garden long before she turned professional around 1912. After learning
the rudiments of design and construction from Platt, she began her legendary collaboration with
him, designing lush plantings to harmonize with his classical architectural elements. She soon
rose to the top of her profession, specializing in small residential properties that were featured in
House Beautiful and other magazines. At the heart of her work was her sophisticated
plantsmanship and her ability to create simple, yet intimate garden settings. By the early 1920s
she was at the peak of her career, managing a New York office with as many as a dozen female
employees. Not until the 1930s did she begin to receive larger, more comprehensive
commissions, such as Longue Vue Gardens in New Orleans and the terrace gardens at Duke
University in North Carolina.
On the whole, Shipman's work has not fared well. Of her 600 commissions (400 more
than Farrand, for example), only a handful are in any recognizable form today due to alterations
or destruction. She has no equivalent of Farrand's Dumbarton Oaks or Coffin's Winterthur. The
rehabilitation of Chatham Manor, Fredericksburg, Virginia (now a National Park Service site), a
number of years ago, as well as the walled garden at Stan Hywet Hall, Akron, Ohio, represent the
beginnings of awareness of Shipman's significance as a landscape architect. More recently, her
gardens at the Cummer Museum of Art, Jacksonville, Florida, were rediscovered after lying
dormant for decades and replanted.
7
Shipman remains somewhat of an anomoly. Unlike Farrand, Hutcheson, and Coffin, she
was not affiliated with the ASLA, as most of her clientele came from the garden club circuit. She
was, however, a staunch advocate for women in the profession through her extensive lecturing
and her office, which served as a training ground for scores of young women, mostly recruits
from the Lowthorpe School whom she guided them through the practicalities of preparing
construction drawings, supervising field work, and running a business. One of her earliest
recruits was Elizabeth Leonard Strang (1886-1948), who worked in Shipman's office after
training at Cornell and later opened her own office specializing in residential garden design.
Elizabeth Lord (1887-1976) and her partner, Edith Schryver (1901-1984), who worked in
Shipman's office in the mid-1920s, were Lowthorpe graduates; in 1929 they opened up the first
female landscape architectural office on the West Coast, in Salem, Oregon.
The careers of countless other women are only now being resurrected from oblivion, but
the absence of archives and office records remains the chief obstacle for researchers and writers.
My research on Shipman, for example, was facilitated by archives at Cornell University,
sympathetic archivists, family members who could provide essential personal information, and
extant gardens.
Nellie B. Allen (1869-1961), a graduate of the Lowthorpe program in 1919 who had a
brief career based in suburban New York in the 1920s and 1930s, is a "typical" example of a
landscape architect whose career is only beginning to emerge from obscurity. The lack of
systematic archives and a paucity of personal information has significantly hampered an in-depth
career profile. A brief note in a book on the English garden designer Gertrude Jekyll, stating that
Allen had visited Munstead Wood, offered evidence of Jekyll's influence in America. The
8
subsequent discovery that Allen had designed a number of gardens, including a rock garden at
Wave Hill in 1934, instigated a serious investigation of her career. Family members produced
examples of her Lowthorpe school work, including watercolor renderings and a set of tracings of
borders designed by Gertrude Jekyll.
Like many of her female colleagues, Allen specialized in planting design, especially
perennial flower borders, the result of her training at Lowthorpe. Allen's proclivity for
Elizabethan-inspired knot gardens, clipped topiaries, and sophisticated flower borders resulted
from her frequent travels to Britain and her meeting with Jekyll. Allen's clients include Frank E.
Bliss, New Rochelle, New York; Clifford McCall, East Hampton, New York; Anne Morgan and
Anne Vanderbilt, Mount Kisco, New York; and Mrs. Oakleigh Thorne, Millbrook, New York,
among others. She also designed a parterre garden in collaboration with Constance Boardman for
the 1939 New York World's Fair. Allen's career is not unlike those of dozens of women
designers who never "made it big" due to family responsibilities, insufficient training, or lack of
opportunities.
Although better known than Allen, Rose Standish Nichols (1872-1960) remains an
equally elusive figure, hampered by the lack of archives thought to have been discarded by family
members shortly after her death. With the exception of vintage slides from the Archive of
American Gardens, Smithsonian Institution, few photographs exist showing her gardens in their
heyday. Her uncle, the American Renaissance sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, a nieghbor of
Shipman's in Cornish, New Hampshire, initially pointed Rose in the direction of garden design
in the 1890s. One of America's earliest female garden designers, Nichols studied briefly at MIT
in 1899 and tutored privately with architect Charles Platt. Like Allen, she specialized in the
9
design and planting of small residential gardens.
Her first garden, for her family's summer home in Cornish, New Hampshire, was
included in Guy Lowell's American Gardens (1902), perhaps the only garden designed by a
woman to be included. Laid out in 1896, when Farrand was just beginning her career and fifteen
years before Shipman embarked on hers, the garden showed the promise of a budding career.
Recently restored, the garden is now part of the Cornish Colony Gallery and Museum.
Nichols's style was formulated on the gardens of England and Italy as well as American
Colonial Revival gardens. In all, she designed about 70, but few are extant and little is known
about most of them. Most are concentrated in Lake Forest, Illinois, where she collaborated with
architects David Adler and Howard Van Doren Shaw, both followers of Platt. In these projects,
her design responsibilities were confined primarily to plantings only. In her other commissions,
ranging from Santa Barbara and Tuscon, to Georgia and the New York-New England area, she
sometimes had a greater hand in laying out the entire property.
Nichols is better known as the author of three important books on historic gardens. An
astute critic, with an excellent grounding in history based on extensive travels abroad, Nichols
found a niche for herself as a garden historian, writing dozens of articles for House Beautiful in
addition to her books. While Elizabeth Strang, Ruth Dean, Rose Greely, Louise Payson, and
other contemporary garden writers focused on the practicalities of planning and maintenance,
Nichols concentrated on historic gardens and trends in garden design, such as Futurist gardens in
Germany and modern gardens in England. Nichols's first book, English Pleasure Gardens
(1902), is one of the first comprehensive treatments of the subject, and her later volumes,
Spanish and Portuguese Gardens (1924) and Italian Pleasure Gardens (1928), are both
10
considered standard works on the subject.
These brief profiles offer a representative sampling of some of the female trailblazers
who staked out their own turf in the early years of the profession. Some, like Nichols and
Shipman, worked as collaborators with male architects and landscape architects, while others,
notably Farrand and Coffin, set out to prove that they were quite capable of doing it all-each
one proved that women, too, were leaders in the profession.
Reading suggestions:
Dorothy May Anderson, Women, Design, and the Cambridge School (West Lafayette,
Ind., 1980)
Diana Balmori, Diane Kostial McGuire, Eleanor M. McPeck, Beatrix Farrand's
American Landscapes (New York: Sagapress, 1985)
Virginia Lopez Begg, "Alice Morse Earle: Old Time Gardens in a Brave New Century,"
Journal of the New England Garden History Society, volume 8 (2000)
Charles A. Birnbaum, editor, Pioneers of American Landscape Design (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2000)
Nancy Fleming, Money, Manure, and Maintenance: Marian Coffin Pioneer Landscape
Architect, 1876-1957 (Weston, Mass.: Country Place Books, 1995)
Martha Brookes Hutcheson, The Spirit of the Garden (1923), introduction by Rebecca
Warren Davidson (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2001)
Richard B. Kimball, "A Little Visit to Lowthorpe," House Beautiful, March 1916
Daniel Krall, "Elizabeth Leonard Strang," Journal of the New England Garden History
Society, volume 11 (2003)
11
Valencia Libby, "Jane Haines' Vision: The Pennsylvania School of Horticulture for
Women," Journal of the New England Garden History Society, volume 10 (2002)
Diane Kostial McGuire, editor, Beatrix Farrand's Plant Book For Dumbarton Oaks
(Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 1980)
Rose Standish Nichols, English Pleasure Gardens (1902), introduction by Judith B.
Tankard (Boston: David R. Godine, 2003)
Anne Petersen, "Women Take the Lead in Landscape Art," New York Times, March 13,
1938
Judith B. Tankard, "Designing Their Turf: Pioneer Women Landscape Designers," Bard
Studies in the Decorative Arts, volume 8 (Fall-Winter 2000-2001)
Judith B. Tankard, The Gardens of Ellen Biddle Shipman (New York: Sagapress, 1996)
Judith B. Tankard, A Place of Beauty: The Artists and Gardens of the Cornish Colony
(Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 2000)
Judith B. Tankard, "Splendor Restored" (Shipman's Italian Garden at the Cummer
Museum of Art), Horticulture, April 2003
Susan Tamulevich, Dumbarton Oaks: Garden Into Art (New York: Monacelli Press,
2001)
Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Art Out-of-Doors: Hints on Good Taste in Gardening
(New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1893)
Cynthia Zaitzevsky, "A Career in Bud: Beatrix Jones Farrand's Education and Early
Gardens," Journal of the New England Garden History Society, volume 6 (1998)
12
Magnolia
Magnolia grandiflora
Publication of the Southern Garden
The Laurel Tree of Carolina
Catesby's Natural History, 1743
History Society
Vol. XXXIII
No. 2
Fall 2020
Dumbarton Oaks Garden and Park: A Celebration
Judith B. Tankard, Boston, Massachusetts
Nearly 100 years after they were first
conceived, the gardens at Dumbarton Oaks
are regarded as an icon among landscape
architects, historians, and garden visitors
the world over. However, they are not
as universally well known nor as fully
appreciated as they should be. In 1985,
landscape architect and scholar Diane Kostial
McGuire recounted in Beatrix Farrand's
American Landscapes that a disappointed
visitor wanted to know "where are the
flowers?" and "where is the color?" After all,
the visitor complained, she had come all the
way from California where gardens were all
about display and vibrant color. "There are
SO many things you could do here to make
this a real garden," she concluded. 1
Part of
the problem lies in the fact that Dumbarton
Beatrix Farrand in her New York office, 1927.
Oaks is not a typical American garden
dependent on horticultural displays, well-worn paths,
land that included a range of dilapidated farm buildings.
signage, and teashops. Instead, it is an extraordinary
On the positive side, there were numerous fine old trees,
accomplishment conceived and executed in a remarkable
but the steeply sloping ground itself presented a serious
partnership between the client and the designer. Together
challenge. The house, which was set on a hill, commanded
they created a magical sequence of designed spaces or
(continued on page 3)
rooms, ranging from formal to informal, that progressed
through the garden, while taking into consideration
Inside this Issue
texture and incidents of alternating light and shade.
When Robert Woods Bliss and his wife, Mildred
Pg. 8
Jane Welles Loudon: "First Professional Lady
Barnes Bliss, first spied The Oaks in Georgetown, they
Gardener"
thought it had the possibilities of becoming their country
Pg. 10 Book Review: André Michaux in North
home in Washington as well as a future institution for
America
their scholarly interests and collections. After returning to
the United States from Paris in 1920 during his long career
Pg.
14 Website Offerings
as a diplomat, Robert Woods Bliss invited the renowned
Pg.
15
In Print: On Ballylee: The Enduring Legacy
landscape gardener and family friend, Beatrix Farrand,
of Our Father's Fields and The Architecture
to view the property. It consisted of a south-facing house
of Trees
built in 1801 with a classical orangery set on 53 acres of
Dumbarton Oaks Garden and Park
(continued from page 1)
fine views, but the land seriously dropped 100 feet down
prepared life-size cardboard mock-ups for the clients'
to the creek below. Despite these challenges, Beatrix
approval. As for planting suggestions, Mildred Bliss herself
Farrand created her undisputed masterpiece. According to
was a knowledgeable horticulturist, so there was much
Walter Muir Whitehead, "the gardens represent the skill of
back and forth about specific selections. Although they
Mrs. Farrand and Mrs. Bliss in constructing an enchanting
sometimes had differing ideas, a mutual respect for one
landscape out of magnificent trees that are on slopes SO
another brought out the best in the two personalities. As
varied and in places SO steep as to present a great challenge
Farrand wrote, "What I shall try and do with The Oaks is
in design."
to simply be your gardening pair of hands, carrying out
In June 1922, Beatrix Farrand prepared a detailed
your ideas." Mildred envisioned a garden to be lived in,
eight-page memo for Mildred Bliss outlining her
balancing private family areas with grander spaces for the
preliminary design and planting suggestions for the
Blisses' extensive diplomatic entertaining. Mildred was a
property, and by 1923 the layout was well advanced and
connoisseur of fountains and other antique ornament that
construction underway. At the time of the commission,
needed to be incorporated into the scheme. As well, her
Farrand was well established in her career dedicated to
knowledge of classical gardens mandated the importance
prestigious private commissions as well as important
of architectural features, such as walls, steps, paths,
campus consultations. She was also familiar with
and small structures, all of which jibed with Farrand's
Washington, having consulted on the National Cathedral
sensibilities to garden design.
in the early days of her career, and later, in 1913, she
The brilliance of the garden conception lies in its
had designed the East Garden at the White House.
response to the topography, letting the land itself dictate
Dumbarton Oaks, however, would prove to be her most
the design, from formal terraces where the land was
challenging and significant commission. As Mildred Bliss
mainly flat to more naturalistic gardens where the grounds
wrote, "the gardens at Dumbarton Oaks were perhaps one
sloped steeply. The result was a blend of Italian terraces,
of the most difficult problems presented to her, for she
French ornamental features, English flower borders, and a
found not only an existing and rather dominating house
romantic woodland dell. It was unlike anything that had
and an unusually wide variety of grades, but also the very
been created in America before According to landscape
definite personal preferences of the owners with their
historian Georgina Masson, Farrand drew upon these
special interest in design and texture."4 In 1960, Lanning
disparate elements to create a garden scene "uniquely her
Roper, the renowned American landscape architect who
own." The placement of the individual terraces near the
worked mostly in England, recounted that "the gardens
house, including a large rose garden that served as the
of Dumbarton Oaks are the product of the harmony of
centerpiece, was dictated by the existing trees, such as
these two dynamic minds. Through their very close co-
copper beech, black oak, and American beech. Farrand
operation the garden evolved, each conceiving, adapting
had learned her lessons thoroughly from Prof. Charles
and re-evaluating her own ideas in the light of experience
Sprague Sargent, Gertrude Jekyll, and William Robinson,
and the best considered opinion of the other." From the
whose various influences can be strongly felt throughout
start, Mildred Bliss had a vision of what she wanted to
(continued on page 4)
create, inspired in part by years of living abroad and her
extensive travels, while Beatrix Farrand had "taste, the
'know how' and the courage of her convictions as well
as her unflagging energy-all important characters for
such a partnership." The resulting gardens are "brilliantly
adapted to a difficult site and rich in decorative detail and
planning.'
To add to the challenge, the Blisses were away from
Washington for the first 10 years, the active years of the
creation of the gardens. In January 1923, Robert Bliss
was appointed minister to Sweden, which necessitated
living abroad for five years, and then in 1927, he was
appointed Ambassador to Argentina for six years. During
these years when the Blisses were mostly absent, Farrand
and her team proposed ideas, prepared sketches, and
for some of the more important architectural features,
such as steps, small structures, and benches, her office
Mildred and Robert Woods Bliss in the Rose Garden, 1936.
Vol. XXXIII, No. 2
Magnolia
Fall 2020 3
Dumbarton Oaks Garden and Park
(continued from page 3)
Dumbarton Oaks. In the end, Farrand's creation was
for use as a public park
a green garden rather than a traditional themed flower
Dumbarton Oaks Park, as it is now called, consists
garden such as those she had designed for Thomas
of the woodlands bordering the creek below the formal
Newbold at Bellefield in 1912 and Edward Harkness
terrace gardens. They illustrate many of Farrand's ideas
at Eolia in 1919, and, (in 1926, her penultimate flower
that she had absorbed from Robinson. "The so-called
garden, the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Garden Part of the
natural garden," she wrote, "is the most difficult to fit
reasoning for her solution at Dumbarton Oaks was the
in with its surroundings" due to no set line to act as a
important fact that it was a two-season garden-spring
backbone. Those once-enchanting gardens were a "highly
and fall-with a green interlude in winter-and heavily
designed composition of meadows, woods, and stream,
dependent on majestic trees and ornamental shrubs.
with waterfalls, bridges, and a reflecting pond anchoring
By 1935,
the landscape. 10
when the
They were
gardens were
opened to the
fully developed,
public in the
the Blisses
mid-1940s,
commissioned
but due to
Rudolph Ruzicka
maintenance
to prepare the
issues, slid
first plan showing
downhill
the finished
for many
layout. The
decades.)U Unlike
plan included
Dumbarton
depictions of 38
Oaks, the
garden spaces,
naturalistic
with delightful
garden quickly
vignettes showing
became
each area or
overgrown with
feature. Although
invasive species,
the gardens were
while crumbling
a masterpiece,
stonework
Farrand's years at
and storm
Dumbarton Oaks
water damage
were not only
were ongoing
challenging but
challenges.
also exhausting.
Fortunately,
When she began
Farrand's unique
DUMBARTON OAKS
in 1921, she was
landscape has
at the peak of her
been rescued in
career, juggling
recent years by
several residential
Plan of the grounds by Rudolph Ruzicka, 1935.
the Dumbarton
commissions
Oaks Park
at once as well as challenging campus consultations, but
Conservancy, whose mission is to revitalize and maintain
by the early 1940s, she was looking forward to peaceful
Farrand's only surviving naturalistic garden while meeting
retirement years at Reef Point, in Maine. The Blisses,
the challenges of sustainability in an urban environment. 11
who intended to turn over their entire estate to Harvard
When Dumbarton Oaks entered this second phase,
University after their deaths, decided to make the
it quickly became apparent that long-term care of the
transfer earlier due to the impending war. Their gift to
ornamental gardens needed to be addressed. The gardens,
Harvard in 1940 included the house and formal gardens
which had never been easy to maintain in the Blisses'
(approximately 16 acres) and an additional 10 acres were
era due to the hilly terrain and the rigorous replacement
transferred to the Danish government for their embassy
of plants, among other issues, would quickly become a
complex. They also donated 27 acres of the adjacent
serious challenge if there were no guidelines. With this
naturalistic woodland gardens to the National Park Service
in mind, and at Harvard's invitation, Farrand prepared
4
Magnolia
Fall 2020
Vol. XXXIII, No. 2
detailed maintenance instructions for the upper gardens,
givers have dedicated the enterprise." By 1951, Farrand
but not those in the adjacent naturalistic park that was
found it increasingly difficult to continue in an advisory
not part of Harvard. Farrand prepared the first draft
role for a research institution rather than a private client,
of the comprehensive plant book in 1944, but it lay
so she bowed out as a gardens advisor, although she
forgotten until it was rediscovered by Diane McGuire
happily helped Mildred Bliss develop her garden library.
and published in 1980 as Beatrix Farrand's Plant Book
During the early years of the institutional phase, Bliss
for Dumbarton Oaks. It stands as a unique document for
had continued to develop the upper gardens, mostly in
one of the greatest gardens in America, "the cornerstone
collaboration with Ruth Havey, who began working in
on which the plan for the preservation of the gardens at
Farrand's office around 1929. Havey made an enormous
Dumbarton Oaks is based."12 The book acknowledges
contribution to the present appearance of the gardens,
Farrand's understanding that without detailed guidance,
working on a redesign and ornamentation of the
maintenance standards would be lowered under
North Vista and the Arbor Terrace as well as her most
institutional ownership/In explicit detail, Farrand
famous addition, the Pebble Garden in 1960. In 1956,
recommended measures to be taken when plants needed
Alden Hopkins redesigned the Ellipse after the original
replacement, the various levels of maintenance required,
boxwood hedge died, replacing it with a double row of
and steps that were not advised. Seventy-five years later,
pleached hornbeams. Harvard employed several landscape
her advice still rings true.
consultants, namely Robert Patterson, who had worked at
It is hard to know what Farrand thought of the
Reef Point and the Arnold Arboretum, and also Donald
transfer of a complex private garden to institutional
Smith, who had also worked at Reef Point and later
ownership. In 1944, after the transfer was complete and
became superintendent of the gardens and grounds at
during her tenure as an advisor, she wrote: "The house
Dumbarton Oaks until his retirement in 1992.
and its surroundings are a single unit at Dumbarton
When it opened to the public in the -1940s,
Oaks. From the students' library, the trees, lawns, and
Dumbarton Oaks became known around the world.
terraces are the outdoor expressions of the continuing
Henry Francis duPont, who also had a world-class garden
and living studies to which the farsightedness of the
(continued on page 6)
Rose Garden from upper terrace, 2008.
Lovers' Lane Pool, 2008.
Mélissande's Allée, 2008.
Fountain Terrace, 2008.
Vol. XXXIII, No. 2
Magnolia Fall 2020 5
Dumbarton Oaks Garden and Park
(continued from page 5)
at Winterthur, wrote to Mildred Bliss in 1949 to say
vision of the owners."15 After Beatrix Farrand died in
he admired the gardens, its upkeep, and above all its
1959, the Blisses erected a memorial tablet in the Green
collection of benches. Today Dumbarton Oaks remains
Terrace:
one of America's outstanding gardens and a tribute to
May kindly stars guard the dreams born beneath the
Beatrix Farrand's immense capabilities as a designer.
spreading branches of Dumbarton Oaks. Dedicated
In 1980, Farrand's contribution to the profession of
to the friendship of Beatrix Farrand and to succeeding
landscape architecture was celebrated in a Dumbarton
generations of seekers after Truth.
Oaks Colloquium, while emerging landscape architects,
such as Michael Van Valkenburgh, benefitted from
Many thanks to Gail Griffin, Director of Gardens and
Dumbarton Oaks Fellowships which had been established
Grounds, Dumbarton Oaks (retired); Lindsey Milstein,
by the Blisses. Numerous landscape architects and garden
President, Dumbarton Oaks Park Conservancy; and Anatole
scholars were quick to recognize Farrand's extraordinary
Tchikine, Curator of Rare Books, Garden and Landscape
accomplishment at Dumbarton Oaks and her career and
Studies, Dumbarton Oaks.
gardens continue to be celebrated in books, articles, and
documentaries.
Judith B Tankard is a landscape historian and the author of
Over the years Mildred Bliss and Beatrix Farrand had
Beatrix Farrand: Private Gardens, Public Landscapes (New
enjoyed a close personal relationship, writing letters to one
York: Monacelli Press, 2009)
another as "MilRob" and "Trix." In 1950, for instance,
Farrand sent the Blisses a sprig of white heather from Reef
Endnotes
Point in memory of their visits. Mildred Bliss provided
1
Diane Kostial McGuire, "Plants and Planting Design," Beatrix
the final accolade when she wrote, "Dumbarton Oaks
Farrand's American Landscapes: Her Gardens & Campuses (New
has its own personality sculptured from Beatrix Farrand's
York: Sagapress, 1985), 63.
2
Walter Muir Whitehead, Dumbarton Oaks: The History of
knowledge and wisdom and from the daydreams and
a Georgetown House and Garden, 1800-1966 (Cambridge:
Urn Terrace. 2008.
Pebble Garden designed by Ruth Havey, 2008.
ARTO New
SIDERA-FAVSTA-FERANT OMINA-ET VSOVE-BON
TESTIMONIO AMICITIAL
BEÁTRICIS l'ARRAND
C-ILLORVM-IMMEMORES:OVEPOSTERO:AEVO
VITAS VERITATI ERVENDAE IMPENDERINT
HANG TABELLAM/POSVERVNU
ROBERTV WOODS BLISSAXOROVE MILDRED
Wisteria on chains in North Vista, 2008.
Tribute panel in Green Garden, 2008.
6
Magnolia
Fall 2020
Vol. XXXIII, No. 2
Harvard University Press, 1967), 63.
University, 1968), 21.
3
Beatrix Farrand, "The Oaks. Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, June 24-
9
Beatrix Jones, "The Garden as a Picture," Scribner's Magazine,
25, 1922," Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collections.
July 1907, 8.
4
Mildred Bliss, "An Attempted Evocation of a Personality,"
10
For more information on the Dumbarton Oaks Park
Beatrix Jones Farrand: 1872-1959. An Appreciation of a Great
Conservancy, visit https://dopark.org.
Landscape Gardener (Washington, D.C.: privately printed,
11 Lindsey Milstein and Liza Gilbert, "Dumbarton Oaks Park: A
Walk on the Wild Side," Oaks, Spring-Summer, 2020.
1960), 13.
12 Diane Kostial McGuire, ed., Beatrix Farrand's Plant Book
5
Lanning Roper, "Dumbarton Oaks: A Great American
Garden," Beatrix Jones Farrand: 1872-1959. An Appreciation,
for Dumbarton Oaks (Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks/
Trustees for Harvard University, 1980), xi.
21.
6
Roper, "Dumbarton Oaks: A Great American Garden," 21, 19.
13 Beatrix Farrand, "Dumbarton Oaks: An Historical Setting for
Beatrix Farrand, letter to Mildred Bliss, July 5, 1922, cited in
the Making of History," Landscape Architecture Quarterly: 34/12
7
Susan Tamulevich, Dumbarton Oaks: Garden Into Art (New
(July 1944), 135.
14 Beatrix Farrand, letter to Mildred Bliss, August 14, 1950.
York: Monacelli Press, 2001), 43-44.
8
Georgina Masson, Dumbarton Oaks: A Guide to the Gardens
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collections.
(Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks/Trustees for Harvard
15 Bliss, "An Attempted Evocation," 17.
Lovers' Lane Entrance, Dumbarton Oaks Park, 1945.
Clapper Bridge Falls, Dumbarton Oaks Park, 1946.
Forsythia Steps, Dumbarton Oaks Park, 1945.
Clapper Bridge Falls, Dumbarton Oaks Park, August 18, 2020.
Magnolia
Fall 2020 7
Vol. XXXIII, No. 2
2/16/2015
XFINITY Connect
XFINITY Connect
eppster2@comcast.net
+ Font Size -
Re: Charles Eliot
From Judith Tankard
Mon, Feb 16, 2015 02:10 PM
Subject Re: Charles Eliot
To : Ronald Epp
Dear Ron,
It was great hearing from you, especially the good news about your book coming out next year. I don't know Anne Kozak
personally, but assume she's a member of the BFS. Sounds like a lot of good projects are lined up for next year's celebration. I know
Scott Koniecko (pres of BFS) is planning some sort of exhibition about the park, perhaps the roads, not sure. I'm no longer actively
involved with the BFS, after 10 years as a board member and 2 years as V-P. I guess you know that Marti Harmon spends most of the
winter in Washington DC these days. I think she works part-time as an archivist at one of the local preservation organizations.
My husband and I are in the midst of "downsizing" in preparation for a move from this multi-story suburban house (with too many
steps) to a condo in Boston (where, presumably, someone else shovels the snow). Haven't found the ideal place yet, but it must have
indoor parking and enough room for most of the books. With that in mind, I have catalogued our book collection and we're weeding out
dupes, paper reprints, and other categories. I still have my original art history tomes from graduate school! What to eventually do with
everything is a topic of hot discussion. What did you do with your book collections when you moved to Penna. and what do you plan to
do with your research files, etc.?
I'm pleased that a UK publisher wanted to publish revised editions of two of my books. It's amazing how quickly they go out
of
print
and how (generally) apathetic US publishers are. Can't interest the publisher of Farrand book to do a paper edition for students, etc.
No
other writing plans at the moment, except book reviews here and there. All best, Judith
At 03:06 PM 2/14/2015, you wrote:
Dear Judith,
It has been an inexcusably long time since I last contacted you.
Just this afternoon, I was pouring through my Charles Eliot files and
extracted a copy of your 1987 thesis, which I should have consulted
several weeks ago.
In early December I received an invitation from the president of the
Mount Desert Island Historical Society to give the keynote at their annual
gathering in late January 2015. The topic was the key conservation events
in late 19th-century America that led up to the formation of the Massachusetts
Trustees and their Maine counterpart. This was not a theme that could be
easily extracted from my biography of George B. Dorr so I had to scramble.
It was good therapy over the holidays since it was coming up on the two year
anniversary since I lost Elizabeth. The event went off well but on her birthday
(1/28) I was still n Bar Harbor as the first blizzard raged.
Since then I've been rethinking Charles Eliot's role on Mount Desert Island and pursuing
additional resources, especially since I was asked to give a paper at the
University of Hartford on Eliot's contribution in the creation of nearby Keney Park, where
(as you know) he succumbed to spinal meningitis.
Are you familiar with a College of the Atlantic faculty member named
Anne Kozak? She covers the park for the island newspaper, the Mount Desert Islander.
I've known her for a decade and while I was on MDI she wanted to inquire into what
I knew about the Wild Gardens of Acadia and how I had integrated it into the Dorn
biography. She is in the early stages of a manuscript on the WGA and I thought
I'd mention this to you since she appeared to be quite familiar with Garland Farms.
My biography (Creating Acadia National Park) will finally be published in
April 2016 by the Friends of Acadia, as part of the island-wide celebrations of
the centennial of the National Park Service and the establishment of Acadia. I've
been highly pleased with the quality of Last Look Editorial in Stoneham, should
you ever need another set of editorial eyes.
But enough about me, how are you and yours faring? I see from your web
page that you have a string of Spring lectures arranged and two Pimpernel
reprints in the works. Congratulations!
http://web.mail.comcast.net/zimbra/h/printmessage?id=272171&tz=America/New_York&xim=
1/2
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Subject: Re: Fwd: Farrand archives
DorrBio2008 (33)
To:
"ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP"
Eliz messages (6)
Dear Ron,
Horseshoe Pond
The photocopies are in the mail. If you have any trouble reading BF's
Member Information
script, let me know. I don't think there is anything else at UC Berekely archives
related to Dorr, Oldfarm, or MD Nurseries, but I wasn't looking for that
Ron Archives (31)
information on my visit. If you ever find yourself in Berkeley, it might be worth
scheduling a visit. There are dozens of boxes of stuff in addition to the flat job
files: photos, letters, reports, etc. Contact Miranda Hambro at
designarchives@berkeley.edu to see what they have listed in their internal
catalog.
Thank you so much for your comments on the BFS and the newsletter.
Would you consider contributing a short piece on connection between BF and
GD for the newsletter? I'm sure our members would like to know more. Let me
know!
I'd love to know the quirky claim that Dorr gave BF her first job. Please
elucidate. I'm in the final throes of my book, done on rather short notice for the
Monacelli Press/Random House. I could have used another several years just
poking around for information. I've spent most of my time debunking old myths,
but BF is quite silent about personal matters.
I actually attended the conference at The Mount, but I no longer have a
copy of the program. What did you speak about??? I hope the book on the
conference is coming out soon.
All best, Judith
At 09:30 AM 8/28/2008, you wrote:
Dear Judith,
Thank you for the phone call. As you can see I did receive your
email message on my return from the Hudson River Valley. While
in Hyde Park, My wife and I visited the Beatrix Farrand Garden at
Bellefield which was charming in its simplicity and floral layout.
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=5333_6357422_114527_2600_248.
8/28/2008
Verizon Yahoo! Mail - eppster2@verizon.net
Page 2 of 3
As a member of the BFS I've much appreciated your writing on
the newsletter. I would very much appreciate receiving a copy of
the Beatrix Jones journal entry on Oldfarm which I first became
aware of while re-reading Jane Brown's work prior to contacting
Marti Harmon before she left for the West Coast. (See my
address below)
My research for the Dorr biography began in 2000 and as Patrick
will confirm has become an obsession which recently resulted in
an offer from Robin Karson at the Library of American Landscape
History to publish the completed biography which will be
distributed by the University of Massachusetts Press; we met one
another when we gave papers at a 2006 garden conference at
The Mount. Right now I'm completing the first overly long draft of
the Dorr biography.
I have documentation on the Dorr family relationship with B.
Jones &, Beatrix and Max Farrand which I will gladly share,
including documentation relative to Mr. Rockefeller. There is
even Dorr's quirky claim that he gave Beatrix her first professional
assignment, which I suppose that Patrick has shared with you.
Two areas where there is little reliable and verifiable data
concerns the actual landscaping and garden design at Oldfarm
and the development of Dorr's horticultural business, the Mount
Desert Nurseries where Farrand purchased plant stock. Have you
run across any documentation on these matters that you could
share?
Again, thank you for the phone call. I appreciate your interest and
hope to meet you prior to the publication of your book on Farrand.
I'll be on MDI the week of September 8th, any chance you'll be
there?
With Best Wishes,
Ron
judith wrote:
>Date: Mon, 25 Aug 2008 10:19:12-0400
>To: epster2@verizon.net
>From: judith
>Subject: Farrand archives
>
>Dear Ron,
> Patrick Chasse gave me your email address and also
Marti
> Harmon told me about your book on George Dorr. I have
a photocopy
> of Beatrix's Garden Notebook from the 1890s with a brief
> description of Oldfarm, which I'm happy to send you. Let
me know if
> you'd like me to send this to your Merrimack NH address.
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=5333_6357422_114527_2600_248..8/28/2008
Verizon Yahoo! Mail - eppster2@verizon.net
Page 3 of 3
As far as
> I know there are no other references to Dorr in the
Farrand
> archives at UC Berkeley.
> I am involved with the Beatrix Farrand Society and am
just
> finishing up a book on Farrand for publication next year.
> Sincerely, Judith Tankard
>
>Judith B Tankard
>1452 Beacon Street
>Waban MA 02468
>617-965-4167
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
(603) 424-6149
eppster2@verizon.net
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Re: George B. Dorr on Mount Desert: Epp Draft 2 - Inbox - Verizon Yahoo! Mail
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Re: George B. Dorr on Mount Desert: Epp Draft 2
Tuesday, December 9, 2008 9:20 PM
Inbox (4)
From: "judith"
Drafts (5)
To: "ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP"
Sent
Spam
[Empty]
Dear Ron,
Trash
[Empty]
Thanks so much for the correx. I've posted them all. I'm sorry about the misspellings, the result of typing too fast! I spent all of last week reviewing the
publisher's edits on my book, some of which left me scratching my head, while others needed to be defused immediately. Do tell me more about the Herbert
My Folders
[Hide]
W. Gleason archive. I'd love to know more. Judith
DorrBiblio (5)
At 05:13 PM 12/8/2008, you wrote:
DorrBio2008 (34)
Eliz messages (6)
Dera Judith,
Horseshoe Pond
I've reviewed your edit of my draft and am pleased. However, I've found some glitches and made some changes-itemized below-- in the
Member Informa
attached revised draft.
Ron Archives (31)
1. Dorr's middle name is "Bucknam," NOT "Buckman."
2. Oldfarm was completed and occupied in 1880, not 1884.
3. In Paragraph 2, I've added a couple of lines from the journal following your suggestion. Please check the spelling of these plant names
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since at times I've had trouble with her handwriting.
My Photos
4. In paragraph 3, the correct name is "S. Weir Mitchell, " NOT "W."
My Attachments
5.
", add "t" in "at the foot of Champlain Mountain."
6.
- review my response to your question about the Bliss referral.
7.
In paragraph 4, "Ten letters from Wharton to Dorr" is better since "Between" implies a two-way correspondence which is not what has
ADVERTISEMENT
survived.
BIDS START AT $1
8. In paragraph 5, last sentence, the actual title of Dorr's work is Acadia National Park. The book currently in print attaches to Dorr's
publication an edited second part pulled together by the trustees of his estate in 1948, four years after his death. They retitled that work The
Story of Acadia National Park, a title with which Dorr would not have been comfortable. Retain Acadia Nationl Park to be historically accurate.
9. Finally, in paragraph 6 I've deleted "Dorr and Farrand" after the word "both" since it strikes me as redundant. So too I've dropped a couple
of "George" references when "Dorr would suffice.
bidz
Hope you concur with these changes. Do send me a copy of what is sent off to the printer, please.
Ron
Ronald H. Epp Ph.D.
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
(603) 424-6149
eppster2@verizon.net
--- On Fri, 12/5/08, judith wrote:
From: judith
Subject: your article
To: eppster2@verizon.net
Date: Friday, December 5, 2008, 5:03 PM
Ron,
I've
done a rough edit of your article. Please review and get back
to me with any revises. Ignore the first couple of lines that are
instructions to the printer.
As
you'll see, I shuffled things around a little to make a more
chronological story. It's all very interesting and I didn't know
about the Wharton bit. This article will tie in nicely with my Winter
Reading article that includes reprints of 2 Wharton books and a
review of new book on William Robinson, father of the Wild Garden and
mentor of BF.
Can
you get back to me by early next week? Thanks. Judith
http://us.mc842.mail.yahoo.com/mc/showMessage?fid=Inbox&sort=date&order=down&
12/10/2008
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Patrick Chasse Scholarship Fund
Wednesday, December 10, 2008 3:14 PM
Inbox (2)
From: "judith"
Drafts (5)
To: eppster2@verizon.net
Sent
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[Empty]
Dear Ron,
Trash
[Empty]
Thanks for the info on HWG. I'll get back to you next week on it.
Meanwhile, I'm delighted you spotted the notice about the Patrick
My Folders
[Hide]
Chasse Scholarship Fund. Please contact BFS President Jim Fuchs about
DorrBiblio (5)
contributing. His email is jcafuchs@mindspring.com or info@beatrixfarrand.org
The Winter 09 issue of the BFS NEWS should be out in early January.
DorrBio2008 (34)
I'll send you a PDF so that you can forward it to your friends.
Eliz messages (6)
Thanks for the query about distribution of the newsletter on MDI.
Horseshoe Pond
Right now it's considered a benefit of membership, but I'm planning
to put back issues on the web site (to be re-launched early next
Member Informa
year) It would be a good idea to have copies available at local
Ron Archives (31)
historical societies, etc. Let me bring it up for discussion at the
next board meeting The editorial committee, by the way, is just me
and Bob Golden, who handles membership services. This is the way of
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life for a small organization.
I'm off to Martha's Vineyard for a long weekend and will be back in
My Photos
touch. Best, Judith
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Dorr pictures
Inbox (23)
From: "judith"
Drafts (7)
To: eppster2@verizon.net
Sent
Spam (12)
[Empty]
Dear Ron,
Trash
[Empty]
The pictures are great. My first choice would be Beechcroft--it
seems to say it all. Do you have a rough date for the photo and/or
My Folders
[Hide]
know the photographer?
DorrBiblio (5)
I have run across the name of Herbert W. Gleason. He took b/w
pictures at Reef Point in the early 1920s and also some Shipman
DorrBio2008 (33)
gardens in Massachusetts around the same time. I don't know anything
Eliz messages (6)
about him, but am thrilled there's a archive What a find! I'd love
to talk with you about him and learn about the gardens he photographed.
Horseshoe Pond
I hope your family business goes well and will look forward to your
Member Informa
article soon. Many thanks. Judith
Ron Archives (31)
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Your book
From
To
Date 06/26/2010 02:10:47 PM
Dear Ron,
Marti Harmon told me you were looking for a publisher for your book on George Dorr. I'm
sorry it didn't work out with LALH, but it's probably for the better. When we meet fact-to-face
I'll tell you about my experience with them on the Shipman book.
You might want to contact my editor at Monacelli Press: Elizabeth White (her husband is
Samuel White and they've collaborated on books about Stanford White, his great-
grandfather). Elizabeth may be able to steer you in the right direction if Monacelli are not
interested. They tend to do well-illustrated books about architecture, interiors, and some
landscape (Farrand seems to be the exception). ewhite@randomhouse.com
I'm away from my home office at the moment, but when I return at the end of next week I'll
give you the name of the editor at WW Norton. I think they would be the right fit for your
book and they specialize in monographs on architects, designers, etc. You may recall that
they did Cynthia Zaitzevsky's book on Women Landscape Architects on Long Island.
Another possibility is University of Virginia Press. They've done some books on environmental
issues. The editor there is Boyd Zenner.
More later. Best, Judith
Judith B Tankard
1452 Beacon Street
Waban MA 02468
617-965-4167
www.judithtankard.com
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=4003
6/28/2010
Page 1 of 3
Re: Lunch with Ron Epp
From "Judith Tankard"
To
Date 07/27/2010 05:46:00 PM
Hi Ron,
From the Mass Pike take exit to 95 South/Route 128. Then take exit
for"Waban/West Newton/Route 16 East". It's just after the service
center/rest stop on right. Follow ramp and turn right onto overpass
(goes over Route 128). Go a short distance and at traffic light fork
right onto Beacon Street (tiny sign). You'll go through a
residential area, then a small village with shops on left. Go one
long block to traffic light. We're the 6th house on the right beyond
the traffic light. House is beige shingle with low lattice fence
around it and garden in front. Park on street. Give a call if you get
lost, but it's literally 10 minutes or less from the MassPike interchange.
1452 Beacon Street
617-965-4167
See you around 11:30 or so. We'll have lunch here (probably a salad)
as it's cool and we don't have to go out (not many choices). Best, Judith
At 05:25 PM 7/27/2010, you wrote:
>Hi Judith,
>
> We just returned from a quick two-day trip to Burlington (VT) and
>yes it is still convenient for me to come tomorrow. I'll be coming
>into Newton on the Massachusetts Turnpike from the West. More
specific directions would be appreciated.
Regards,
> Ron
>
>
>Quoting Judith Tankard :
>>Hi Ron,
>>Is it still convenient for you to come on the 28th? My house is
>
>air-conditioned! Let me know what time you'll be here in the morning
> >and I'll send you directions. Are you coming from Wellesley, Boston,
>>or Route 95? Judith
>> > Date: Tue, 06 Jul 2010 08:42:09 -0400
>> >To: eppster2@myfairpoint.net
>> >From: Judith Tankard
>> >Subject: Re: Lunch with Ron Epp
>> >
>> >Dear Ron,
>> >Wednesday July 28th would be perfect. I'll give you a tour of my
>> >library, then we can have lunch. let me know when you need
>> directions. Judith
>> >
>> >At 07:28 PM 7/5/2010, you wrote:
>> Dear Judith,
>> >>
>> >>Wednesday, July 28th, is a good date for lunch in Newton. What time
>> >would work best for you? 11:30? Later?
>> >>
>> >> Now that the holiday celebrations are over, I'll contact Elizabeth
>> >White and the other leads that you so generously provided. Very
>> >>much looking forward to meeting you!
>>>>
>> >> Most Cordially,
>>>>
>> >>Ronald Epp
>> >>
>> >>Quoting Judith Tankard :
>> >>> Dear Ron,
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=4397
7/27/2010
Page 2 of 3
>>>I'd love to get together for lunch with you one day. I'm available
>> >>>July 27, 28, and 29, August 3, 4, and 5 if any of those dates work
>> >>>for you.I live in the Waban section of Newton just off Exit 21A on
>>128/95South (I'm just south of the MassPike interchange). I can send
>>>>>more detailed instructions, but we're a stone's throw from Wellesley
>>>>>Hills. Happy 4th. Judith
>> P.S. Yes, please use my name with those publishers I
>>
recommended. >>>Also, please do contact Elizabeth White.
I
>> mentioned to her that you
>> >might be contacting her and she said she's be glad to talk with
>> you. >>>At 07:35 P 7/2/2010, you wrote:
>>>>>
->>> Dear Judith,
>>>>>>
>> >>> >Yes, I have received both of your recent email messages. I am most
>>
>>> >appreciative of your suggested contacts at Monacelli, Norton, and
>> >the University of Virginia. Might I use your name by way of
>> introduction?
>>>>>>
>>>>> >Before I signed the contract with Robin, it was intent to submit the
>>>>> >proposal to Harvard University Press, the University of
>>>>> >Massachusetts Press, and University Presses of New England. With the
>>>>> >exception of the UMASS Press--where the LALH connection is still
>> >>> >strong--I will pursue these venues as well. I'm now beginning to
>> >>> >familiarize myself with their submission requirements and will keep
>> >>> >you abreast. >Unfortunately, I won't be back on MDI in early
>>>>> August but hope to
>>>>> >return before the summer is completely gone in order to do more
>>>>> >archival work on the J.D. Rockefeller Jr. papers. It had been my
>>>>> >intention to come down to Wellesley later in July and I wondered
>>>>> >whether you might be available for lunch in Newton (after the 22nd)
>>>>> >so we could meet and briefly share our LALH tales. If this is
>>>>> >feasible, suggest a couple of dates that work for you and we'll see
>>>>> >if we can find common ground (I'll defer to your familiarity with
>>>>> >local eateries). Later in August is also feasible. >I was most
>> .>>> surprised when I heard from you after talking to Marti. >She has
>>>>> been so consistently supportive of my efforts. >I've attached a
>>>>> copy of the recently revised Introduction to the
.>>> Dorr ms. should you wish to get a sense of what I've attempted
>>> to do. >Have a delightful 4th of July!
>>>>>>
>>>>> Most Appreciateively,
>>>>>>
>> >>> >Ron
>>>>>>
>>> >Quoting Judith Tankard :
>>>>>>> Dear Ron,
>>>>>>>I hope you received my earlier email regarding ideas for publishers?
>>>>>>>I wrote it on another computer away from my office and promised I'd
>> >>> >>get back to you with some specific names of
>>
>>> editors/publishers. First off, I'd try Nancy Green, senior
>>>>> editor, at W. W. Norton. she
>can be reached at ngreen@wwnorton.com or 212-790-4353
>>
>Another suggestion is to try Boyd Zenner, acquisitions editor,
>>
>University Press of Virginia. She can be reached at bz2v@virqinia.edu
>and her phone is 434-924-1373. UVA has done a number of
"environmental" books such as Melanie Simo's books. Might take a look
>>
>>>
>>at their website www.upressvirginia.edu
>>
>>>
>>Another option is the University Press of New England, which you
>>probably already know about. They recently published a book on the
>>collected writings of Beatrix Farrand. I don't know an editor there,
>>
>but the website is www.upne.com
>>
If you are planning to attend my lecture at the BFS on August 7th I
>>
>>would be delighted to meet you at long last. Best, Judith
>>>>>>>
>Judith B Tankard
1452 Beacon Street
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=4397
7/27/2010
Page 3 of 3
>>>>> >Waban MA 02468
>> >>> >617-965-4167
>www.judithtankard.com
>>>>>>
>>
>>> > Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D. 47 Pondview Drive
>>
>>>
>Merrimack, NH 03054
>>>>>
(603) 424-6149
>>>>> >eppster2@myfairpoint.net
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
>> >> Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D. 47 Pondview Drive
>> >>Merrimack, NH 03054
>> >> (603) 424-6149
>> > >eppster2@myfairpoint.net
>> >>
>>
>
>Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D. 47 Pondview Drive
> Merrimack, NH 03054
> (603) 424-6149
>eppster2@myfairpoint.net
>
>
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=4397
7/27/2010
Page 1 of 1
visit to Garland Farm
From
"Judith Tankard"
To
Date 08/31/2010 05:08:00 PM
Attachments MartiMirokutoEpps6-24-10.JPG 58.23KB
Forwarded message
From: Judith Tankard
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 17:04:15 -0400
Subject: visit to Garland Farm
To: eppster2@fairpoint.net
Dear Ron,
I don't know if you've seen this picture or not. Thanks for the
update. I'm sorry to learn about Elizabeth's condition. I've been
there with the biopsies and lumpectomies, but outcome was fine. Thanks
for your encouraging words about CE. Keep in touch. Best, Judith
You have been sent 1 picture.
MartiMirokutoEpps6-24-10.JPG
These pictures were sent with Picasa, from Google.
Try it out here: http://picasa.google.com/
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=4900
8/31/2010
Page 1 of 2
3
The Epps & the Tankard & Dorr manuscriptd
From
To
"Judith Tankard"
Cc
Date 08/31/2010 03:09:07 PM
Dear Judith (and Marti too!)
Thanks for sharing your thoughts Judith about LALH. Revisiting this
period in your life cannot be pleasant. You should know that I finally
sent off a brief letter to Robin informing her of my intent to actively
pursue other publishing opportunities for what I consider to be a
strong manuscript. I wanted to get beyond any lingering contractual
issues as I approached other publishers.
To date I am still preparing letters for several of the publishers you
recommended. I've redrafted two chapters where Jane Roy Brown had
muddle--quite out of character--several of the endnotes and the other
chapter required extensive revision in light of the four dozen letters
that the curators uncovered this Spring at Castle Howard. All of this
has been overshadowed by our discovery this past June--following her
annual mammagram-- that my wife has breast cancer. She has had two
lumpectomies in July and August but precancerous cells remain; a
"simple" prophylactic mastectomy will be performed this Friday. We have
great confidence in the surgeon and the Elliot Health System in
Manchester.
I very much appreciate the invitation to the October 9th BFS library
and collections committee meeting. If Elizabeth is sufficiently
recovered we had hoped to travel to Pennsylvania that weekend for our
50th high school reunion.
Finally, I have read Judith's extended essay on "Charles Eliot: the
Education of a Landscape Architect," and was very impressed with the
new insights I gained into his intellectual development. Even though
this essay is more than two decades old, nothing comparable has been
published. I see that it is listed in the Hollis catalog but I suspect
that there are few other copies about. It should be in the Trustees of
Reservations holdings and if you don't mind, I'd like to suggest to
them that they secure a copy for their archives. While you may consider
this to be an "immature" work, I'd like to suggest that you revisit it
with an eye to publishing it in part or as a whole, revised or in its
present state. My ongoing thought was how fortunate we all are that
Charles Eliot left such a detailed account of his travels so that this
reconstruction was possible; it is my everlasting regret that Mr. Dorr
left us nothing remotely comparable for his four years traveling over
the same turf.
Our best to you and yours!
Ron Epp
Quoting Judith Tankard
> Dear Ron,
> Thanks for returning CE so promptly. I'm somewhat embarrassed that
> you are reading this pre-career essay!
> I hope you hear from Harvard UP soon about your book. In thinking
> about your situation with LALH, it occurred to me that the real
> reason your book was dropped was the lack of money. She may have had
> too many balls in the air and your book didn't have the necessary
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/hwebmail/mail/message.php?index=1296
8/31/2010
Page 2 of 2
> funding to hand, so something had to go. She was certainly dragging
> her feet about paying you according to your contract. Just a theory,
> but having read your article for the BFSN etc. I think the lukewarm
> comments by the reader were part of the scheme to justify the action.
> It's all very odd. Let me know if I can write any letters of support
> for you, and I hope you find the right publisher soon.
> Re the BFS, we have a Library and Collections Committee event on
> Saturday, October 9th. Perhaps you can plan another visit to Garland
> Farm for the event? Check out details on
> www.beatrixfarrandsociety.org Best, Judith
>
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
47 Pondview Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
(603) 424-6149
eppster2@myfairpoint.net
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/hwebmail/mail/message.php?index=1296
8/31/2010
Page 1 of 1
Re: From Ron Epp
From
"Judith Tankard"
To
Date 03/13/2011 11:18:11 AM
Hi Ron,
I'm glad to hear you've had a nibble from Cornell. It's an excellent university press, so hopefully that will
work out after jumping through a few hoops. I like the title also, as Acadia will be more familiar to people than
Dorr. Keep me posted.
I think we were all stunned to learn of Eleanor's death. The last time I saw her was at the conference at
The Mount. apparently she didn't tell anyone about her illness, but the fact that her husband died last year
probably didn't help. There's a good obit on www.edithwharton.org Let's hope her papers went to The Mount or
elsewhere. She was very helpful with me re sorting out some EW pictures that may/may not have shown
Beatrix's mother. I was sorry she wasn't active with the BFS or asked to be a speaker. Judith
At 11:39 AM 3/8/2011, you wrote:
Hi Judith,
I hope you and yours are faring well. Elizabeth and I are hopeful that we have at last seen the last
hurrah of winter. Meanwhile the search for retirement communities continues.
I was most surprised and saddened to read in The B.F. Newsletter of the death of Eleanor Dwight.
I first met her at The Mount when we did back-to-back presentations. She invited me to her BH
home where we talked of her father, his publications, and his photographs of the 1947 Dorr
memorial dedication at the Sieur de Monts Springs. She generously gave them to me so that Josh
Torrance (Director of Woodlawn Museum) could have copies made for the HCTPR archives. I
supposed that she was a few years older than me but I was unaware of any health issues so the
news of her death was unexpected--and the very brief obit in the NYTimes was disappointing. I
didn't see an obit in The Islander. I hope she made provisions for her scholarly studies to find
their way into an appropriate archive!
I have had a nibble from Cornell University Press. They asked me whether I was willing to do a
new table of contents that involved reframing the manuscript. To wit, abandon the traditional
biographical model ("He was born He drew his last breath") and use transformational experiences
in at least the opening chapters of the book. Relate the bulk of the early chapter content to
vignettes placed elsewhere where appropriate. Integrate the related lives of Charles W. Eliot and
Rockefeller, Jr. so that their evolving relationship becomes more prominent. And make the
park itself a character more than a landscape on which the story of Acadia is written.
After spending a week weighing the benefits and risks of such an undertaking, I decided to move
ahead with his proposal. The editor has a Ph.D. in American philosophy which draws him to the
Harvard Golden Age of Philosophy characters and his boss has a home on MDI and thinks the story
of Mr. Dorr ought to be told, perhaps under a new title like "The Making of Acadia National Park."
What do you think?
With Best wishes,
Ron Epp
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=8282
3/13/2011
Page 1 of 1
Your book
From
"Judith Tankard"
To
Date 07/02/2010 10:42:40 AM
Dear Ron,
I hope you received my earlier email regarding ideas for publishers?
I wrote it on another computer away from my office and promised I'd
get back to you with some specific names of editors/publishers.
First off, I'd try Nancy Green, senior editor, at W. W. Norton. she
can be reached at ingreen@wwnorton.com or 212-790-4353
Another suggestion is to try Boyd Zenner, acquisitions editor,
University Press of Virginia. She can be reached at bz2v@virqinia.edu
and her phone is 434-924-1373. UVA has done a number of
"environmental" books such as Melanie Simo's books. Might take a look
at their website www.upressvirginia.edu
Another option is the University Press of New England, which you
probably already know about. They recently published a book on the
collected writings of Beatrix Farrand. I don't know an editor there,
but the website is www.upne.com
If you are planning to attend my lecture at the BFS on August 7th I
would be delighted to meet you at long last. Best, Judith
Judith B Tankard
1452 Beacon Street
Waban MA 02468
617-965-4167
www.judithtankard.com
Page 1 of 2
Re: Happy New Year
From "Judith Tankard"
To
Date 02/16/2011 04:18:03 PM
Dear Ron,
I am saddened to learn of the lukewarm reception to your book idea.
Publishers have been rejecting proposals for years based on "the book
has no market," "no one has ever heard of him," etc. I find it
interesting that Nancy Green did not want it. Who ever heard of some
of the architects in the Norton series before there were books on
them? And what did University Press of New England say? They
published a small book on Beatrix Farrand's garden notebook last
year. Maybe it needs a jazzier title or re-focused to attract
tourists who buy books on Acadia and MDI? Have you looked at
www.shermans.com to see who the publishers are for their books on
Acadia. Also there's Acadia Publishing, which does those small
picture books, such as one on Southwest Harbor, etc., and also
Downeast (but they tend to be glossier). Maybe self-publishing is the
way to go, but it's expensive and you need a good layout person (plus
editor!). Keep me posted. Judith
At 02:17 PM 2/16/2011, you wrote:
>Dear Judith,
>
>I have yet to find the "ideal retirement community" but Elizabeth
>and I are increasingly aware of what do do not want. Our needs mimic
>your own (see below). These communities also are far more expensive
>in New England than in the Middle Atlantic States so our net has widened.
>Thank you again for the use of your name in contacting publishers.
>Unfortunately, none found favor with my proposal. Nancy Green (who
>has a summer home in Frenchman Bay) kindly took the extra step and
>put me in touch with the Moon Handbooks author, Kathleen Brandes,
>who referred me to Tilbury House in Gardiner (which also didn't pan
>out). However, Kathleen agreed to be a contact for publishers
>who wanted an expert appraisal of the title. All the New England
>academic presses have rejected it. I still have about ten proposals
>pending. The common theme for passing is that publishers claim the
>book has no market. Consequently, I'm now researching
>self-publishing. I will keep you informed. What projects are you now pursuing?
>
> I've been asked to give a presentation on Mr. Dorr at the May
> celebration of the centennial of the Jesup Memorial Library. We'll
>stop by Garland Farm and see Marti.
> All the Best,
>
> Ron Epp
>
>
> Quoting Judith Tankard :
> > Dear Ron,
> > I hope the New Year brings you success with your book project. Let
> > me know if there's anything else I can do. I was amused by your
> > search for the ideal retirement facility. When you find it, let us
> > know. Our needs are probably the same as yours: enough space for
> > books and cooking equipment, good internet service, a politically
> > hospitable state, lower taxes, easy access to airport, not too hot in
> > summer or cold in winter nor too many bugs or allergies, and close
> > access to a good wine shop (and medical facilities). We're stymied.
> > All best, Judith
>
> Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D. 47 Pondview Drive
> Merrimack, NH 03054
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=7839
2/16/2011
Page 1 of 2
Re: visit to Garland Farm
From
"Judith Tankard"
To
Cc "judith"
Date 10/14/2010 02:04:43PM
Dear Ron,
Sorry for the delay in responding. I don't generally check my gmail
account because I only use it to send pictures when I can't do so on
my main account. Best to email judith@tankard.net
Glad to learn that Elizabeth is progressing, but watch out for that
Amish diet! When I was a kid my parents dragged me along to visit
friends in York PA. We'd always go to the markets and an annual
firehouse supper with everything from 7 sweets & sours to chicken pot
pie to shoe fly pie. And the quantities were enormous.
Meanwhile, you are most welcome to take another look at the MPCRs or
borrow them if you want. I'm not using them, but eventually I'd like
them to go to someone who would appreciate them.
Good luck with HUP. The hoops that you need to jump through for UPs is
mind-boggling. I always like to keep proposals succinct. I'd think 8
to 10 pages would be max. They are not experts on the subject; they
just need to know why it is important. They are probably more
interested in your credentials than anything else, so your're safe
there.
The Mount lecture went well. About 150 people! but spent most of time
fiddling with the projection equipment. They subtracted that from my
60 minutes and about 3/4 of the way through I got a tap on the
shoulder.
Did I tell you there's a woman who's writing a book for Yale UP on
some newly found corres between EW and her governess, Anna Bahlmann,
who later became her secretary.
The Library event went very well. We had an excellent display of books
etc in about 8 different categories (Travel, Mentors, Horticulture,
Family, Maine, etc.) A good, keen audience. Sorry the season's over at
Garland Farm.
Stay in touch. Best, Judith
On 10/5/10, eppster2@myfairpoint.net wrote:
>
>
> Dear Judith,
>
> Thanks for the photograph and its surprising inclusion in the
> newsletter. I can't ignore the obvious--I've got to lose some weight!
>
> Last Monday Elizabeth returned to the lab and her new 24-hour a week
> schedule. She is recovering well following a visit to the oncologist we
> are now weighing the advantages and disadvantages of hormone therapy.
> On Thursday we leave by car for eastern Pennsylvania to visit friends
> and stock up on locale Amish good eats.
>
> Regarding your offer of the Metropolitan Parks Commission Reports,
> there are very few complete (27 volume) sets and they retail for about
> $800. It has been quite a few years since I examined closely the
> earlier volumes in the TTOR archives at Long Hill. I need to find the
> opportunity to look closely at the remaining volumes to determine
> whether they are germane to my interests before I'd consider an offer.
> But don't let my indecision restrict your actions
>
> For the last several weeks I've been revising various drafts of the
> Dorr prospectus and tailoring them to suit the requirements of specific
> publishers. In the case of Harvard University Press, I'm nearing
>
completion but would appreciate your advice. Their proposal guidelines
> (www.hup.harvard.edu/resources/authors/proposal.html). provide no
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=5644
10/14/2010
Page 2 of 2
> guidance on the length of the proposal. I've constructed several of
> varying length (6-18 double-spaced pages) but am skittish about
> elaborating too much or offering too little. Any suggestions? Care to
> see the short and long versions? What has been your experience in these
> first encounters?
>
> Were you pleased with the reactions to your presentation at The
> Mount? I wish I could have been on MDI for the library meeting but
> through October my I need to be available to Elizabeth. I am giving
> some thought to a short trip to MDI in early November. Planning is
> about to get underway for the upcoming 2016 centennial of the NPS. I've
> been invited to participate. Since I've submitted several chapters of
> an administrative history of the park for funding consideration, I
> might be able to help and influence a reconstructed view of the park
>
founder and the first quarter-century of the park. I also need to do
> some more dirty basement archival work with the extensive collection of
> untouched J.D. Rockefeller Jr. park papers.
>
> Hope you are well and that you and your husband had a most pleasant
> summer.
>
> Most Cordially,
>
> Ron
>
> Quoting Judith Tankard :
> >
Forwarded message
> > From: Judith Tankard Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2010 17:04:15 -0400
>> Subject: visit to Garland Farm
>> To: eppster2@fairpoint.net
>>
>> Dear Ron,
>> I don't know if you've seen this picture or not. Thanks for the
> > update. I'm sorry to learn about Elizabeth's condition. I've been
> > there with the biopsies and lumpectomies, but outcome was fine. Thanks
>> for your encouraging words about CE. Keep in touch. Best, Judith
>>
>> You have been sent 1 picture.
>>
>>
>> MartiMirokutoEpps6-24-10.JPG
>>
>> These pictures were sent with Picasa, from Google.
>> Try it out here: http://picasa.google.com/
>
> Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
> 47 Pondview Drive
> Merrimack, NH 03054
> (603) 424-6149
> eppster2@myfairpoint.net
>
>
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/mail/message.php?index=5644
10/14/2010
Page 1 of 1
Re: Rose Nichols
From "judith"
To
Date Wed, 24 Jun 2009 10:12:22-0400
Dear Ron,
Poor Rose is an unsung hero, but nothing much is left of her
work. Mastlands, her garden in Cornish, is now privately owned again
and no longer a museum. Not enough info/data/correspondence/plans to
do a proper bio of her and her gardens are not particularly
outstanding. Grey Towers sent the photo of GP I used in the Arnoldia
article. I've also written about her in Pioneers and a couple of
other journals.
Glad your book is progressing. Jane Roy Brown is a writer
and editor for Landscape Architecture Magazine, so I'm sure you'll be
happy working with her. She also edited the final issue of the
Journal of the New England Garden History Society before Mass Hort
dropped it. You're right about how difficult it is to write the
Introduction. I rewrote the one for the Farrand book dozens of times,
and then it was rewritten/modified by the editors. So hard to know
what to say/not say. Good luck. Let me know if you need any more info
on Rose. Have you visited the Nichols House Museum at 55 Mt. Vernon
Street, Boston? Best, Judith
At 11:29 AM 6/19/2009, you wrote:
>Hi Judith,
>
>I came across your "Rose Standish Nichols" article several days ago
>and have just finished reading it.
>Very well done! I was not at all familiar with her but was
>enlightened when you related her to Augustus Saint-Gaudens, linked
>her to Charles Platt, and spoke about her work at Grey Towers. My
>wife and I grew up in Allentown (PA) and for decades have driven
>through Milford, stopping often at Grey Towers to walk the trails.
>Since one of George Dorr's friends was Gifford Pinchot, I've also
Jan Ray Brow-
>had their staff look into the G.T. archives for correspondence, to no avail.
>The week after next I'll send the first half of the Dorr biography
When had cope
>off to Robin Karson. My editor there is Jane Roy Brown. So far
Histories Enterine
>Karson did not like my Introduction but perhaps that is actually
>best written after the biography is completed. I'll let you know how
>it goes given your cautionary remarks.
Jul 2008, Pp.50,52,
>
54-56,
>I look forward to the appearance of your Farrand biography though
>I'll not be able to attend the Garland Farms reception. Any
>appearances planned in the Boston area?
>
Have a relaxing summer, if the damn rain ever stops!
>
> All the Best,
>
> Ron
>
> Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
>47 Pondview Drive
>Merrimack, NH 03054
>(603) 424-6149
>eppster2@myfairpoint.net
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/hwebmail/mail/message.php?index=1135
6/29/2009
12/20/2020
Sent - Mail - eppster2@comcast.net Xfinity Connect
"Magnolia" Farrand article
RONALD EPP
1:39 PM
To Judith Tankard
Reply
Forward
Delete
Dear Judith,
I hope that this email finds you and your hubby anticipating the joys associated with the
season.
The other day I chanced upon your celebration of Dumbarton Oaks Garden and Park. What
a
treat! So very well written, pulling this reader from one paragraph to another with special
attention to the origin, development and difficult history of the Park. It makes me burn with a
desire to visit once our country becomes safer. I had not known of Robert Patterson's
consultancy there. And several of the images that you selected brought me back to my
childhood; namely, the young women dressed in 40's attire dangling feet at Clapper Bridge
Falls.
But what prompted me to dig into my own archive was your second endnote. Walter Muir
Whitehead is a giant by so many different forms of measurement. In working on the Dorr
book I repeatedly found article after article by him that had relevance to my understanding of
19th and 20th century New England culture. If you have not read David McCord's
bibliographic and memorial Boston Athenaeum essays on his personality, they are well worth
your time--as is the F.S. Allis New England Quarterly memorial essay.
Speaking of Boston, I have spent a great deal of time over the last six months pursuing virtual
lectures being offered at the Boston Athenaeum, NEHGS, the Harvard Bookstore, and the
MHS. They have lifted me out of house-bound isolation into the world of shared scholarship
that I have sorely missed. I strongly recommend zooming to these sites.
Stay safe!!
Yours,
Ron
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
7 Peachtree Terrace
https://connect.xfinity.com/appsuite/#!!&app=io.ox/mail&folder=default0//qj%7Bo5Xlp%7D
1/1
Maine Olmsted Alliance for Parks & Landscapes
Page 1 of 4
Maine Olmsted Alliance
for Parks & Landscapes
Book Reviews
A Baker's Dozen of the Century's Best Books on American Gardens
by Judith Tankard
Summer 2001
As the new century opens, it is a good time to consider what are the great
books that have been written about America's garden heritage in the last 100
years. Indeed, in the last two decades the market has been flooded with many
good books (like it was in the early 1900s), making up for the paucity of
publications in the mid years. When it comes down to it, almost all books
(except the truly bad) have something to offer, but above all, what are the best
of the best?
The first book that immediately comes to mind is The
=GOLDEN
Golden Age of American Gardens: Proud Owners,
MEHCANGARDENS
Private Estates. 1899-1940 by Mac Griswold and
Eleanor Weller (Harry N. Abrams, 1991). If I had to
give a foreigner one book about America's historic
gardens, this would be it. Not only is it attractive and
beautifully produced, but it has a rich text. Although it's
not a light read, there's something in it for everyone,
from the novice to the serious scholar who thrives on
bibliographic minutia. At over 400 pages, it is packed
with solid research and a treasure trove of visuals,
mostly vintage photographs from the Garden Club of
America's collection now at the Smithsonian
Institution. The authors paint a glorious picture of the
peak of garden design in this country. May this book
never go out of print.
The book's predecessor, Gardens of Colony and State: Garden and Gardeners of the
American Colonies and of the Republic Before 1840, was also instigated by the Garden Club
of America. The two large folio volumes, edited by Alice Lockwood and issued by Charles
Scribner's between 1931 and 1934, represent the glories of old-time publishing sensibilities:
beautifully embossed bindings, nice paper and handsome illustrations. It's a thrill just to
handle the books that are mostly now in libraries. For many years these lavishly illustrated
tomes were the first books that gardeners, historians, or anybody turned to when they wanted
to know more about regional gardens. Long out of print and steeply priced ($800-$1,200 for
the set at specialty booksellers), the good news is that a more reasonably priced facsimile
edition will be available shortly. For further information, contact The Garden Club of
America, 14 East 60th St., New York, N.Y. 10022.
A close runner-up for a visually appealing book is Louise Shelton's Beautiful Gardens in
America (Charles Schribner's, 1915). While short on text, it has hundreds of vintage
photographs of the best gardens in the country during the first decades of the 20th century.
Many of the full-page photographs, an art form in themselves, were taken by "name"
photographers of the era, such as Mattie Edwards Hewitt and Jessie Tarbox Beals. This
book, and especially the revised 1924 edition, shows the glories of private gardens in their
heyday. Whether you are interested in design, garden ornament, or planting, there is
something for everyone in this book. Long out of print, copies can often be obtained from
specialty booksellers.
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For those interested in a "good, entertaining read" about gardens, one of the best of the best
is Louise Beebe Wilder's Colour in My Garden (Doubleday, 1918), with charming watercolor
illustrations by Anna Winegar. Considered the dean of American women garden writers,
Wilder lovingly (and critically) regales her readers with the triumphs and failures in her own
garden called Balderbrae. "It is the custom to despise magenta," she writes. "It is hustled out
of our gardens and out of our consciousness and no one has eyes to see the imperial scarf of
magenta Phlox that stoops to bind the dusty roadside." A devoted follower of the English
doyenne of gardening Gertrude Jekyll (most women gardeners at that were), Wilder's
exasperation with poor soil, a hot climate, and short bloom times (all in comparison with the
over-rated English climate) is still heartfelt today. This book was reprinted in 1990 by Atlantic
Monthly Press. See if you can find a copy.
So what's new, you ask? What are the books that have come out more recently? At the top
of the list would be Keeping Eden: A History of Gardening in America (Bulfinch, 1992), a
collection of essays by leading historians, skillfully edited by Walter Punch for the
Massachusetts Horticultural Society. I hope the word "essays" doesn't put anyone off,
because it's not stodgy at all and it is well illustrated with new photographs, drawings and
period paintings. Topics include plants and seeds, science and technology (i.e., lawnmowers
and garden tools), greenhouses, horticulture books, in addition to overviews of regional
gardening from California to New England.
Surprisingly, there are few books that give the overall history of American gardens. For those
interested in the lore of gardening, no one surpasses Ann Leighton for blending a firm
knowledge of history with a love of plants. Her trilogy -- Early American Gardens: "For Meate
or Medicine," American Gardens in the Eighteenth Century: "For Use or Delight," and
American Gardens of the Nineteenth Century: "For Comfort and Affluence" (University of
Massachusetts Press, 1976-1988) -- is highly recommended reading.
May Brawley Hill's book Grandmother's Garden: The Old-Fashioned American Garden 1865-
1915 (Abrams, 1995) set the modern-day standard for garden history books with a readable,
intelligent text and extraordinarily beautiful illustrations, in this case paintings of gardens by
American impressionist artists. One can simply goggle over the illustrations without even
reading the text, but the reader would be missing Hill's delightful narrative explaining the
charm of old-fashioned flower gardens and their regional diversity, from artists colonies to
suburbia. It took an art historian rather than a horticulturist to focus on the visual aspects of
garden appreciation.
There are many books devoted to regional gardens,
from Louisiana to Virginia to the West Coast, but three
books stand out as exceptional. Starting in New
SOFINE A PROSPECT
England, perhaps the most delicious book in terms of
Bisson Mez Expires
sheer reading pleasure is Alan Emmet's So Fine a
Prospect: Historic New England Gardens (University
SEAX EXPER
Press of New England, 1996). Progressing
chronologically from the early 18th century to the early
20th, Emmet takes a different approach to garden
appreciation. She presents 16 important private estates
(some now vanished) through the eyes of the families
who created them, using their diaries and other
personal papers to help recreate their gardens as they
perceived them. The reader is soon swept up in the
progress of our country's history and the multiple ways
that gardens express their owner's wealth, creativity
and secret desires.
Jumping to California, another outstanding book is
David C. Streatfield's California Gardens: Creating a
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New Eden (Abbeville, 1994). Much peppier in format
(befitting the sunny climate), the book's attractive photographs belies the author's deep
knowledge of his subject. Traversing from Hispanic mission gardens to California's signature
modern gardens, such as those designed by Thomas Church, Garrett Eckbo, and Lawrence
Halprin. Streatfield surfs through all the many influences that made California the kingdom
that it is. Victorian, Arts and Crafts, and Homes of the Stars all sit comfortably side-by-side.
Personally, every time I take this book down from the shelf I immediately want to fly off to
California.
And almost exactly in between the two coasts is a remarkable find, Susan Davis Price's
Minnesota Gardens: An Illustrated History (Afron Historical Society, 1995). A multiple award-
winner, the book is engagingly written and sensitively illustrated. It should be mandatory that
every state have a book like this one. From the start I was enthralled with the visuals-early
color postcards, family snapshots and modern photographs. The author tells us all about
homesteaders and the seeds and gardening traditions they brought from the old country, the
pleasure grounds of the Victorian era, and the "great estates and passionate gardeners" of
the early 20th century. One extra special chapter is devoted to the home front: gardening,
lawns and roses during the 1940s and 1950s. Who else ever wrote about this unassuming
topic and made it come alive? A final chapter, "How Cold Is It?" brings it all home.
If one had to cite the name of the most famous garden in America (the equivalent of
Sissinghurst or Hidcote in England), it would be a tough call: Dumbarton Oaks, Longwood
Gardens, Lotusland, Mount Vernon, Old Westbury Garden, Winterthur? Denise Magnani's
The Winterthur Garden: Henry Francis duPont's Romance with the Land (Abrams, 1995)
presents a good case for this world class garden in Delaware. Known for its serene woodland
gardens with massive plantings of ornamental shrubs and wildflowers rather than showy
borders and fancy garden layouts, Winterthur represents the best of the best of American
gardens. Magnani's text, accompanied by Carol Betsch's sumptuous photographs, reveals
Winterthur in four seasons, touching on the remarkable story of its creator.
While all the books mentioned above will appeal to armchair-gardener readers as well as
specialists, no list of the century's best books could be complete without citing at least one
volume from the prestigious Dumbarton Oaks series. These publications represent the
pinnacle of scholarship for the few who appreciate it. Regional Garden Design in the United
States (Dumbarton Oaks, 1995), with essays by many leading historians, will appeal primarily
to specialists who thrive on battles over the exact definitions of terms such as "regional" and
"gardens." This volume (based on a symposium held in 1991) was one of the first to address
regionalism in this field, using case studies of the work of Jens Jensen, Wilhelm Miller,
Horace Cleveland, and other names known only to historians. These publications are
available from the Dumbarton Oaks Publication Office, 1703 32nd St., Washington D.C.
20007 (202.339.6431).
The final book, 100 Years of Landscape Architecture: Some Patterns of a Century (American
Society of Landscape Architects, 1999) breaks beyond the barrier of "gardens" into the
territory of landscape architecture. It is a handsomely produced book, published to
commemorate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the ASLA, with an insightful text by
historian Melanie Simo. It is an outstanding publication, with appealing photographs that
showcase the best work of each decade. One gets more of a sense of the progress of this
country's culture and aesthetics through this one book than any other mentioned. The
volume is definitely a keepsake, with its handsome binding and its own slipcase. To order the
book, contact the ASLA Book Store (800.787.2665) or www.asla.org.
Judith B. Tankard edits the Journal of the New England Garden History Society and teaches
in the landscape design history program at Radcliffe Seminars. Her most recent book, A
Place of Beauty: The Artists and Gardens of the Cornish Colony (Tenspeed Press, 2000),
received a Quill and Trowel Award from the Garden Writers Association of America.
This article originally appeared in Volume 5, No. 1 of Traditional Gardening. It is reprinted
http://www.maineolmsted.org/journal/reviews/bakerdoz.html
12/2/2002
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Series 2