UNESCO
World Heritage Site
Official
name Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Kew Gardens
is a botanic garden in southwest London that houses the "largest and most
diverse botanical and mycological collections in the world".[1] Founded in
1840, from the exotic garden at Kew Park, its living collections include some
of the 27,000 taxa[2] curated by Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, while the
herbarium, one of the largest in the world, has over 8.5 million preserved
plant and fungal specimens.[3] The library contains more than 750,000 volumes,
and the illustrations collection contains more than 175,000 prints and drawings
of plants. It is one of London's top tourist attractions and is a World
Heritage Site.
Kew
Gardens, together with the botanic gardens at Wakehurst in Sussex, are managed
by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, an internationally important botanical
research and education institution that employs over 1,100 staff and is a
non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs.
The Kew
site, which has been dated as formally starting in 1759, although it can be
traced back to the exotic garden at Kew Park, formed by Henry, Lord Capell of
Tewkesbury, consists of 132 hectares (330 acres) of gardens and botanical
glasshouses, four Grade I listed buildings, and 36 Grade II listed structures,
all set in an internationally significant landscape. It is listed Grade I on
the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
Kew Gardens
has its own police force, Kew Constabulary, which has been in operation since
1845.
History
Kew
consists mostly of the gardens themselves and a small surrounding community.
Royal residences in the area which would later influence the layout and
construction of the gardens began in 1299 when Edward I moved his court to a
manor house in neighbouring Richmond (then called Sheen). That manor house was
later abandoned; however, Henry VII built Sheen Palace in 1501, which, under
the name Richmond Palace, became a permanent royal residence for Henry VII.
Around the start of the 16th century courtiers attending Richmond Palace
settled in Kew and built large houses. Early royal residences at Kew included
Mary Tudor's house, which was in existence by 1522 when a driveway was built to
connect it to the palace at Richmond. Around 1600, the land that would become
the gardens was known as Kew Field, a large field strip farmed by one of the
new private estates.
The exotic
garden at Kew Park, formed by Henry Capell, 1st Baron Capell of Tewkesbury, was
enlarged and extended by Augusta, Dowager Princess of Wales, the widow of
Frederick, Prince of Wales. The origins of Kew Gardens can be traced to the
merging of the royal estates of Richmond and Kew in 1772. William Chambers
built several garden structures, including the lofty Great Pagoda built in 1761
which still remains. George III enriched the gardens, aided by William Aiton
and Sir Joseph Banks. The old Kew Park (by then renamed the White House), was
demolished in 1802. The "Dutch House" adjoining was purchased by
George III in 1781 as a nursery for the royal children. It is a plain brick
structure now known as Kew Palace.
The
Epicure's Almanack reports an anecdote of the garden wall as of 1815: "In
going up Dreary Lane that leads to Richmond you pass along the east boundary
wall of Kew Gardens, extending more than a mile in length. This dead wall used
to have a most teasing and tedious effect on the eye of a pedestrian; but a
poor mendicant crippled seaman, some years ago, enlivened it by drawing on it,
in chalk, every man of war in the British navy. He returns annually to the spot
to refit his ships, and raises considerable supplies for his own victualling
board from the gratuities of the charitable, who pass to and from
Richmond."
Some early
plants came from the walled garden established by William Coys at Stubbers in
North Ockendon. The collections grew somewhat haphazardly until the appointment
of the first collector, Francis Masson, in 1771. Capability Brown, who became
England's most renowned landscape architect, applied for the position of master
gardener at Kew, and was rejected.
In 1840,
the gardens were adopted as a national botanical garden, in large part due to
the efforts of the Royal Horticultural Society and its president William
Cavendish.[24] Under Kew's director, William Hooker, the gardens were increased
to 30 hectares (75 acres) and the pleasure grounds, or arboretum, extended to
109 hectares (270 acres), and later to its present size of 121 hectares (300
acres). The first curator was John Smith.
The Palm
House was built by architect Decimus Burton and iron-maker Richard Turner
between 1844 and 1848, and was the first large-scale structural use of wrought
iron. It is considered "the world's most important surviving Victorian
glass and iron structure".[25][26] The structure's panes of glass are all
hand-blown. The Temperate House, which is twice as large as the Palm House,
followed later in the 19th century. It is now the largest Victorian glasshouse
in existence. Kew was the location of the successful effort in the 19th century
to propagate rubber trees for cultivation outside South America.
In February
1913, the Tea House was burned down by suffragettes Olive Wharry and Lilian
Lenton during a series of arson attacks in London.
Kew Gardens
lost hundreds of trees in the Great Storm of 1987.
From 1959
to 2007, Kew Gardens had the tallest flagpole in Britain. Made from a single
Douglas-fir from Canada, it was given to mark both the centenary of the
Canadian province of British Columbia and the bicentenary of Kew Gardens. The
flagpole was removed after damage by weather and woodpeckers made it a danger.
In July
2003, UNESCO put the gardens on its list of World Heritage Sites.
A
five-year, £41 million revamp of the Temperate House was completed in May 2018.
Five trees
survive from the establishment of the botanical gardens in 1762. Together they
are known as the 'Five Lions' and consist of: a ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba), a
pagoda tree, or scholar tree (Styphnolobium japonicum), an oriental plane
(Platanus orientalis), a black locust, or false acacia (Robinia pseudoacacia),
and a Caucasian elm or zelkova (Zelkova carpinifolia).
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