Gertrude Jekyll

The famous turn of the century garden designer was a great exponent of walls and natural planting. Turn of the ninetieth century that is, she was born in 1843 and died 1923, her hey days in terms of garden design were the 1880’s to 1920’s.

She originally studied to be an artist, the arts and crafts movement had a big influence on her, the likes of Turner, Ruskin and William Morris. It was later that her failing eyesight caused her to leave painting and turn to garden design. Also at this time she became friends with Edwin Lutyens a young architect, also influenced by the arts and crafts movement. Her family lived in Godalming in Surrey, their house was designed by Lutyens. Subsequently she collaborated extensively with him, he designed the house and she worked on the garden. She designed over 400 different gardens and there are many that survive and are indeed still open to the public. She also wrote books and numerous articles for publications such as Country Life and as said she was an artist and also a photographer.

Reading her books gives you a strong impression of what she was like. I would say knowledgeable but not to be messed with. Her opinions were very much to the point and there could be no arguing. Her book Wall and Water Gardens published in 1901 has extensive descriptions of the designs and types of walls and suggestions for what should be planted in or on them. She has lists for walls situated in the sun and suggests plants like Cheddar Pink and Stonecrops Then for walls in the shade she has Ferns , Mossy Saxifrages and Snapdragons which she says can be used in sun or shade.

She mentions lots of native plants which she considers suitable such as Mulleins, Stitchwort, Shinning Cranesbill Wall Pennywort, Welsh Poppy and Red Valerian.

Here are a couple of quotes from her book, this talking about lawns. ‘how many gardens on sloping ground are disfigured by profitless and quite indefensible steep banks of mown grass! Hardly anything can be so undesirable in a garden. Such banks are unbeautiful, troublesome to mow and wasteful of spaces that might be full of interest. If there must be a sloping space and if for any reason there cannot be a dry wall, it is better to plant the slope with low bushy or rambling things. ‘

And this about brick walls. ‘often the wall that one would wish to make the home of many a lovely plant is of the plainest brick or stone, and the mortar joints are fairly sound. Still the ardent wall gardener is not to be daunted, for, armed with a hammer and a bricklayers cold chisel he knocks out joints and corners of bricks (when a builder is not looking on) exactly where he wishes to have his ranges of plants.’

I think these quotes get across the nature of the lady, formidable to say the least.

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Author: poitoucharentesinphotos

Retired ecologist. Wife, children and grandchildren, not too many of each! Hobbies include photography, travel, eating and drinking, wildlife and history. I suppose I should now add writing as my book on Woodland Wild Flowers was published in May 2021 and I am now working on two more. Coastal Wildflowers which is more or less complete and one about Walls and flowers, combining famous or interesting walls with flowers that colonise them.

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