Description

A detailed look at early American flowers and herbs, with expert advice on creating a garden with historically accurate plants

Hounds-tongue. Ragged robin. Costmary. Pennyroyal. All-heal. These plants, whose very names conjure up a bygone world, were among the great variety of flowers and herbs grown in America’s colonial and early Federal gardens. In this sumptuously illustrated book, a leading historic plant expert brings this botanical heritage back to life.

Drawing on years of archival research and field trials in Colonial Williamsburg’s gardens in Williamsburg, Virginia, Lawrence Griffith documents fifty-six species of flowers and herbs and provides details on how they were cultivated and used. For each plant, an elegant period hand-colored engraving, watercolor, or woodcut is presented along with glorious new photographs by Barbara Temple Lombardi.

This book is a dazzling treat for armchair gardeners and for those who have visited and admired the famous gardens of Colonial Williamsburg. It is also an invaluable companion for twenty-first-century gardeners who will appreciate the specific advice of a master gardener on how to plan, choose appropriate species for, and maintain a beautiful, historic flower and herb garden.

The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation is a not-for-profit educational institution that operates the world’s largest living history museum.



Published in association with the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

Flowers and Herbs of Early America

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Hardback by Lawrence Griffith , Barbara Temple Lombardi

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A detailed look at early American flowers and herbs, with expert advice on creating a garden with historically accurate plants... Read more

    Publisher: Yale University Press
    Publication Date: 27/04/2010
    ISBN13: 9780300164541, 978-0300164541
    ISBN10: 0300164548

    Number of Pages: 304

    Non Fiction , Home & Garden

    Description

    A detailed look at early American flowers and herbs, with expert advice on creating a garden with historically accurate plants

    Hounds-tongue. Ragged robin. Costmary. Pennyroyal. All-heal. These plants, whose very names conjure up a bygone world, were among the great variety of flowers and herbs grown in America’s colonial and early Federal gardens. In this sumptuously illustrated book, a leading historic plant expert brings this botanical heritage back to life.

    Drawing on years of archival research and field trials in Colonial Williamsburg’s gardens in Williamsburg, Virginia, Lawrence Griffith documents fifty-six species of flowers and herbs and provides details on how they were cultivated and used. For each plant, an elegant period hand-colored engraving, watercolor, or woodcut is presented along with glorious new photographs by Barbara Temple Lombardi.

    This book is a dazzling treat for armchair gardeners and for those who have visited and admired the famous gardens of Colonial Williamsburg. It is also an invaluable companion for twenty-first-century gardeners who will appreciate the specific advice of a master gardener on how to plan, choose appropriate species for, and maintain a beautiful, historic flower and herb garden.

    The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation is a not-for-profit educational institution that operates the world’s largest living history museum.



    Published in association with the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

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