Ellen Ann
Willmott
Ellen Ann
Willmott FLS VMH (19 August 1858 – 27 September 1934) was an English
horticulturist. She was an influential member of the Royal Horticultural
Society, and a recipient of the first Victoria Medal of Honour, awarded to
British horticulturists living in the UK by the society, in 1897. Willmott was
said to have cultivated more than 100,000 species and cultivars of plants and
sponsored expeditions to discover new species. Inherited wealth allowed
Willmott to buy large gardens in France and Italy to add to the garden at her
home, Warley Place in Essex. More than 60 plants have been named after her or
her home, Warley Place.
Ellen
Willmott was born in Heston, Middlesex, the eldest of three daughters of
Frederick Willmott (1825–1892), a solicitor, and Ellen Willmott (née Fell) (d.
1898). She and her sisters attended the exclusive Catholic convent school
Gumley House for several years. In 1875, the family moved to Warley Place at
Great Warley, Essex, which had 33 acres (130,000 m2) of grounds; this was to be
Ellen’s lifelong home. The family were keen gardeners and developed Warley
Place’s gardens together. One of the most ambitious developments was an alpine
garden, including a gorge and rockery (pictured), which Ellen's father gave her
permission to create on her 21st birthday.
Willmott
received a substantial inheritance when her godmother, Helen Tasker, died. This
enabled her to buy her first property near Aix-les-Bains, France, in 1890.
Willmott
inherited Warley Place on her father’s death and continued to develop the
gardens, indulging her passion for collecting and cultivating plants. She is
thought to have cultivated more than 100,000 different plant species and
cultivars. The garden included a conservatory, glasshouses, an irrigation
system, a rock garden partly designed as an alpine gorge, a boating lake and a
glass-covered cave for filmy ferns and she had tens of thousands of bulbs
planted to form naturalistic drifts of blossom when they flowered.
Willmott
employed up to 104 gardeners, and was known for being a demanding employer; she
would reputedly sack any gardener who allowed a weed to grow among her flowers.
She only employed men in her garden; she was once quoted as saying "women
would be a disaster in the border".
She was
also known for being a prodigious spender. In 1905 she bought a third estate in
Ventimiglia, Italy. Willmott used her wealth to fund plant-hunting expeditions
to China and the Middle East, and species discovered on these excursions would
often be named after her. The expeditions she sponsored included those of
Ernest Henry Wilson, who named Ceratostigma willmottianum, Rosa willmottiae and
Corylopsis willmottiae after her. Over fifty plant species or varieties were
named for her and her gardens.[6] Willmott joined the Royal Horticultural
Society in 1894 and became a prominent member, elected to the narcissus and
tulip committee in 1896,[6] as well as floral (group B) and lily committees.
She helped to persuade Sir Thomas Hanbury, her neighbour at Ventimiglia, to
purchase the site at Wisley which became the RHS Garden, Wisley and donate it
to the society,[8] and was appointed a trustee of the RHS Gardens in 1903.
Willmott
was one of only two women, alongside Gertrude Jekyll, to receive the Victoria
Medal of Honour in 1897 (newly instituted that year for Queen Victoria’s
Diamond Jubilee). In 1904 she became one of the first women to be elected a
fellow of the Linnean Society of London. She also received the grande médaille
Geoffroi St Hilaire from the Société d’acclimatation de France in 1912, and the
Dean Hole medal from the Royal National Rose Society in 1914.
She published
two books; Warley Garden in Spring and Summer in 1909 and The Genus Rosa, published
in two volumes between 1910 and 1914.[4] This includes 132 watercolours of
roses painted by Alfred Parsons between 1890 and 1908, which are now held by
the Lindley Library in London (Cory Bequest). It only sold 260 copies, leaving
her with a debt.[6] Willmott also commissioned Parsons to paint her three
gardens. Queen Mary, Queen Alexandra, to whom The Genus Rosa was dedicated, and
Princess Victoria are known to have visited her at Warley Place. In 1914 she
initiated a bitter public spat with the horticulturalist E.A. Bowles about some
observations on rock gardens made by Reginald Farrer in his foreword to one of
Bowles' books.
In addition
to her career in horticulture, Willmott also had other, lesser known
accomplishments in particular photography and ornamental turning. In 1932,
Willmost presented her Holtzapffel lathe, some examples of her ornamental
turning work, and a number of photographs and slides of horticultural subjects
to the History of Science Museum, Oxford.
Willmott’s
prodigious spending during her lifetime caused financial difficulties in later
life, forcing her to sell her French and Italian properties, and eventually her
personal possessions. She became increasingly eccentric and paranoid: she
booby-trapped her estate to deter thieves; secretly sowed seeds of the giant
prickly thistle Eryngium giganteum in other people's gardens, leading to it to
be colloquially known as Miss Willmott's Ghost; and carried a revolver in her
handbag.Willmott was arrested on suspicion of shoplifting in 1928, although
later acquitted.
Willmott
died of atheroma and embolus of the coronary artery in 1934, aged 76.[1] Warley
Place, which had greatly deteriorated,[17] was sold to pay her debts[7] and the
house was demolished in 1939, although plans to develop a housing estate on the
site were rejected.[12] It was later designated as a green belt and 6.5
hectacres became a nature reserve overseen by the Essex Wildlife Trust. The
remainder is in the care of the Warley Place Management Committee and
maintained as an abandoned garden.
A short history of Warley Place
https://www.essexwt.org.uk/nature-reserves/warley-place/history
The
Willmott family, comprising Frederick Willmott, his wife Ellen and his two
daughters Ellen Ann and Rose, moved to Warley Place in 1875. The three women
were all keen gardeners, but it was Ellen Ann who really transformed the
grounds into one of the most celebrated gardens in the country. Her father died
in 1892 and her mother in 1898, her sister Rose having married into the
Berkeley family in 1891 and moving to Spetchley Park, near Worcester, in 1897.
As well as
developing the gardens in general, in 1882 the daughter Ellen, at 24 years of
age, started on her new alpine garden. It was a major undertaking, involving
building a ravine with a stream running along it and a special cave for her
filmy ferns. The ravine and the massive rocks exist to this day, but sadly
there is no sign of the original plants.
In 1894
Ellen acquired the services of a gardener from Switzerland to oversee the alpine
garden. Jacob Maurer proved to be brilliant at his job and a real gentleman,
and stayed there until she died forty years later. The cottage in which he
lived, with his wife and nine children, was South Lodge which still stands by
the entrance to Warley Place.
Ellen
Willmott soon made a name for herself in horticulture, and helped to finance
expeditions to acquire new plants. Queen Mary, Queen Alexandra and Princess
Victoria visited her, and her garden became famous throughout Britain and
beyond. She was one of two women awarded the RHS Medal of Honour in Queen
Victoria’s Jubilee Year, 1897. The other was Gertrude Jekyll.
Sadly in
some ways she spent all her money on the garden and her musical and other
interests and died, in 1934, almost penniless. Many of the rarer plants were
removed to Spetchley Park to be cared for by the Berkeley family, but some of
the trees and shrubs exist to this day.
The house
was sold and permission sought to turn it into a luxury housing estate. This
was not to be and the house was demolished in 1939, the garden reverting to a
wilderness. It was leased from the grandson of the 1939 purchaser to the Essex
Naturalists’ Trust (later Essex Wildlife Trust) in 1977 and has gradually been brought
up to its present standard as a nature reserve, but still retaining as many as
possible of the features of the original garden.
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