Historic Virginia Gardens:
Preservation Work of The Garden Club of Virginia,
1975-2007 |
Margaret Page Bemiss Photographs by Roger Foley |
| 304 pages, 8 1/2 x 10 |
| 125 color photographs, 2 halftones, 45 line drawings |
| Cloth ISBN 978-0-8139-2659-9 $49.95 |
| Available April 2009 |
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For more than seventy-five years, The Garden Club of Virginia
has undertaken garden research and preservation work at numerous
historic sites across the Old Dominion, restoring and creating
beautiful landscapes for the education and enjoyment of all, from
backyard gardeners to design professionals. Historic Virginia
Gardens documents in breathtaking fashion this important
contribution to the Commonwealth’s botanical and architectural
heritage. Picking up where an earlier volume, dedicated to the
period from 1930 to 1975, left off, this new book brings the Club’s
work from the period 1975 to 2007 to life through a graceful and
informative text by Margaret Page Bemiss, a host of historical
and contemporary drawings, extensive native and heritage plant
lists, and 125 splendid new color photographs from the award-winning
garden photographer Roger Foley.
The gardens highlighted here range in location from the Eastern
Shore to Blacksburg, and date from the seventeenth century to
the twenty-first. Margaret Bemiss describes not only the preservation
of the gardens, but also each place, its builder, and its historic
context. Giving the reader a fuller understanding of why each
particular garden or landscape was worth restoring or re-creating,
Bemiss explains the site’s significance, in Virginia’s
rich history as well as in the history of gardening and landscape
design. In addition to Foley’s photographs, each narrative
is also accompanied by bird’s-eye-view drawings and site
plans for the gardens, along with working drawings of garden buildings,
furniture, fences, and gates. Of particular interest to practicing
gardeners and garden historians is the comprehensive list of native
and imported plants that were utilized in the gardens. The significance
of the projects, from George Washington’s Mount Vernon and
Gari Melchers’s Belmont to the Prestons’ frontier
home in Blacksburg and Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, makes
this book of interest not only to gardeners and landscape architects,
but also to anyone with an interest in American history.
Historic Virginia Gardens is sure to find a treasured
place on the library shelf beside its predecessor, which was praised
by the Virginian-Pilot as a “book [that] will please any
gardener, be it a group restoring grounds around a shrine or a
suburbanite pondering whether to plant phlox or periwinkle along
the front walk.”
Margaret Page Bemiss is a current member
and former president of the James River Garden Club. She has also
been a member of the Restoration Committee of The Garden Club
of Virginia, and served on the Archive of American Gardens Committee
of The Garden Club of America.
Roger Foley’s award-winning landscape
and garden photography has appeared in books and magazines for
more than 20 years. He is the sole photographer in nine books,
including the two award-winning books Washington’s
Gardens at Mount Vernon and Seascape Gardening.