End of an Era: Amateur Gardening Ceases Publication
https://www.sungardening.co.uk/News:End-of-an-Era-Amateur-Gardening-Ceases-Publication
The news
this week that Amateur Garden is to cease publication has sent shockwaves
through the horticultural industry. A mainstay of the gardening press, the much
loved weekly magazine provided generations of gardeners with tips and
inspiration, and was due to celebrate its 140th anniversary next year. Sun
Gardening's Steve and Val Bradley, along with the late Peter Seabrook all
worked for the AG, as did many well know names in the gardening media industry.
The news was announced in the wake of increased operating costs across the
magazine industry, including a 20% year on year rise in the cost of paper.
Former News
and Web Editor at Amateur Gardening and friend of Sun Gardening, Marc
Rosenberg, had this to say on the announcement:
This is a sad week for those of us who work in
horticultural publishing, with the news that Amateur Gardening (AG) – the UK’s
oldest weekly gardening magazine – is to close, with its final issues to be
published next month (October).
Although I left AG in 2017 to specialise in
freelance editorial and communications, I was privileged to have spent almost
two decades on the editorial team, working alongside the UK’s leading
horticultural writers, broadcasters and TV presenters.
Founded in
1884, AG championed the Dig for Victory campaign during World War II; secured a
Parliamentary enquiry into the future of allotment gardening with its
Allotments 2000 campaign, achieved incredible sales growth during the Ground
Force garden makeover era and launched the National Amateur Gardening Show. AG
is the magazine where, in the 1980s, a young deputy editor by the name of Alan
Titchmarsh made his big break into the world of television.
The working
hours on AG were often insane, but we had a lot of fun. We challenged
environmental hogwash, exposed rogue traders selling banned garden chemicals
online, questioned whether big budget gardens at RHS shows had lost touch with
reality and secured interviews with top celebrities, breaking a host of stories
that made headlines in national newspapers and bagging a wheelbarrow full of
awards in the process.
The
challenges facing print media in an industry hammered by rising costs and
intense battles for circulation are well documented, but the closure of AG
represents the loss of one of the most cherished brands in British gardening
history – a title that always stood up to horticultural snobbery, provided
down-to-earth advice and, above all, believed that growing flowers, fruit and
veg should be fun, even if you lack horticultural know-how and don’t have much
money.
Hats off to
editor Garry Coward-Williams and his team who worked like trojans to keep AG
rolling off the press through the nightmares of Brexit, Covid and the
cost-of-living crisis – and for supporting me as a freelancer by commissioning
my ideas for editorial content. After 139 years of hitting the newsstands, AG
will be sorely missed, especially by elderly readers who looked forward to the
magazine every week, and novice gardeners who took up the nation’s greatest
hobby during the pandemic.
History and the early years
Amateur
Gardening was founded in London in May 1884 by Shirley Hibberd, who edited it
until 1887. This makes it the oldest UK amateur gardening weekly still
published today, and was Britain's bestseller in that category in 2013. The
magazine is published once a week. Its editorial offices are in Farnborough,
Hampshire.
At the time
of the magazine's launch in 1884 there had been several other notable gardening
magazines in circulation, including the Gardeners' Chronicle and Gardens
Illustrated, but these were tailored more to the professional gardener. Amateur
Gardening is considered the first paper designed specifically for the amateur.
The
founders were two brothers, W. H. and L. Collingridge, who also produced other
periodicals of the time, including the well-known City Press.
The first
issue of Amateur Gardening consisted of 16 pages, 12 of which were devoted to
editorial matter. The first editor, Shirley Hibberd, was a botanist and an
academic authority on gardening. He included in the magazine articles which
were thought by many to be too technical. He remained the editor for only two
years.
The man who
really established Amateur Gardening was T. W. Sanders, who remained editor for
40 years. Sanders knew exactly what the new generation of amateur gardeners
wanted, and his style of editing attracted a wide audience. Before the First
World War, a circulation of 100,000 copies per week had been achieved, although
this fell off considerably during the war. Not until the mid-1920s did the
circulation rise to a healthy level again.
Sanders
also wrote a large number of books, most notably Sanders' Encyclopaedia of
Gardening. This was the "bible" for several generations of gardeners
and is consulted even today.
In 1926,
the magazine suffered a severe blow when Sanders died. The assistant editor, A.
J. Macself, was able to take over as editor and steer the magazine through
another 20 years of what was probably the most turbulent period in its history.
In 1934
Macself presided over the title's 50th birthday party, celebrating in grand
style with a dinner for more than 300 people in the New Connaught Rooms in
London's Mayfair. The guest list included Lord Aberconway, the then President
of the Royal Horticultural Society, Sir Austen Chamberlain (a former Chancellor
of the Exchequer) and Lord Riddell (a director of the Collingridge publishing
firm, and a personal friend of former Prime Minister David Lloyd George).
In June
1940 the magazine left its offices in the City and moved to the Country Life
Building in Covent Garden.
Macself was
a member of the original Hardy Plant Society and a renowned expert in ferns.
Arguably he was even more prolific as a writer than Sanders. Between 1933 and
1939 he launched a series of gift books, as well as an annual and a calendar,
besides writing numerous ordinary gardening books.
He carried
on editing through World War II, even though paper restrictions had
dramatically limited the size of the magazine. During this period Amateur
Gardening put its full weight behind the national Dig for Victory campaign,
which encouraged everyone to grow their own fruits and vegetables to combat the
wartime shortages.
Boom
When
Macself retired in 1946, he was succeeded by Arthur Hellyer, hitherto the
assistant editor. Hellyer had joined the magazine in 1929, and was charming,
knowledgeable and hardworking. He retired in 1967. During his years as editor
he also contributed weekly to the Financial Times and regularly to Country Life
and many other publications – and he wrote innumerable books.
Hellyer
took over at a great time on the magazine's history. Paper restrictions were
lifted during the 1950s and 1960s, and the magazine enjoyed a boom, the like of
which had never been seen before or since. Circulation rose to a staggering
300,000 copies per week, and issues regularly contained some 124 pages.
Remarkably, by 1967 when Hellyer retired, the magazine had been in business for
83 years, but had only had four editors.
For the
first hundred years of the magazine's life it seemed to be the norm that when
an editor stopped, his role was taken over by the assistant editor. This
happened again when Hellyer retired, as his assistant, Anthony Huxley, took on
the role. He was the son of the writer Julian Huxley, and a nephew of the
philosopher and writer Aldous Huxley, who wrote Brave New World in 1932.
Anthony was also the great-grandson of Thomas Henry Huxley, a renowned
biologist who defended Darwin's theory of evolution when it was receiving
considerable criticism.
Huxley was
a keen and knowledgeable plantsman, and although he was supportive of amateurs
generally, he was more interested in botanical integrity and ecology,
particularly in the cultivation of house plants. He introduced the use of
bottle gardens to the UK, and in 1956 exhibited the first ever bottle garden at
the Chelsea Flower Show. He was editor for just four years; in 1971 he left to
devote his time to book writing and freelance journalism.
The post of
editor was taken over by assistant editor Peter Wood, who had been a student at
the RHS garden at Wisley in the early 1950s, and had come to Amateur Gardening
straight after his diploma course finished. He started off in the department
helping to answer the thousands of readers' queries that arrived by post each
year. During his editorship, Wood steered the magazine through the
technological revolution (the introduction of computers) and the turbulent
periods of industrial unrest in the 1970s. There were several times when
Amateur Gardening was printed with blank white pages, when the printers refused
to deal with pages that had been written by, or contained pictures from people
who were not members of specific trade unions.
Wood also
presided over the magazine's centenary celebrations in 1984. With garden
designer Roger Sweetinburgh, he drew up the plans for a Victorian garden at the
Chelsea Flower Show – and won a Gold Medal for it. There was also a centenary
lunch at RHS Wisley Garden, with a ceremonial tree-planting. It was a much
lower-key event than the 50th birthday celebrations, but this was the
recession-hit Thatcher era. Budgets for big parties were tighter.
In 1979,
Wood was instrumental in moving the magazine out of London, to Poole in Dorset.
Recent years
Wood
retired from the magazine in 1985, and was replaced by Jack Kendall, a
journalist who worked on Practical Householder (a sister magazine to Amateur
Gardening). He was not an experienced gardener, but was a good organiser and
writer. Shortly after he started, Kendall was diagnosed with terminal cancer,
and he died just 10 months later.
For much of
the time Kendall was being treated for cancer, the magazine's deputy, Graham
Clarke, had been acting editor, and upon Kendall's death he was appointed
editor. Clarke had been born into horticulture as his father had been a
Superintendent (today known as a Manager) of Regent's Park in the centre of
London. For all of Clarke's childhood he had lived in a lodge within the Queen
Mary Rose Garden. When a teenager, he and his family moved to Hyde Park,
London's most famous open space. After completing school he studied
horticulture at the Royal Horticultural Society's Wisley Garden in Surrey.
Theory and practical qualifications lead him to a year working in the garden at
Buckingham Palace, following by a stint working in the commercial glasshouse
nursery for the Central Royal Parks. In 1976 he moved into journalism, joining
Amateur Gardening as a trainee sub-editor. He rose through the ranks, and took
over as editor in 1986.
During
Clarke's 11-year tenure as editor, he also launched a monthly version of
Amateur Gardening (which was called Your Garden), and Clarke became group
editor (over this and The Gardener, another monthly magazine which had been
bought from one of the companies that had suffered under the hands of publisher
Robert Maxwell).
In 1997
Clarke took on a more business-oriented role at the magazine. The National
Amateur Gardening Show, which was held annually between 1996 and 2008, was an
idea conceived by Clarke, along with the magazine's then marketing manager
Robyn Perrin. The Show was a partnership with the Royal Bath and West
Showground, Shepton Mallet, and was held annually in September. After the
magazine withdrew from the Show in 2008, it continued for a further four years
and was held for the last time in 2012.
In 1997, to
mark the forthcoming Millennium, Clarke launched the Allotments 2000 campaign,
which called for – and achieved – a Parliamentary Inquiry into the future of
allotment gardening.[7] Clarke and deputy editor Adrian Bishop both gave
evidence at the Inquiry into the current state of allotments in the UK. The
Allotments 2000 campaign later won Clarke and Bishop the Campaign of the Year
award from the Periodical Publishers Association (PPA).
When Clarke
moved from the editor's chair in 1997, the editorship passed on to Bishop. He
had been a journalist for local newspapers, and under his leadership Amateur
Gardening enjoyed tighter news coverage of gardening matters, and a more
celebrity-based style. In 2001 he was promoted simultaneously to
editor-in-chief and publisher, which lead the way for the current deputy editor
to move up, and Tim Rumball took over the reins. Under Rumball the magazine
overtook many of its long-standing rivals, and consolidated its position as the
leading general gardening magazine on the news stands. As editor he has been a
guest a number of times on BBC's Gardeners' Question Time, and has appeared on
TV many times. He instigated (and presented) the first Amateur Gardening DVD.
In 2017 the
parent company, Time Inc (UK) Ltd, decided to move the magazine from its south
coast-based office in Poole, to the company's headquarters at Farnborough in
Hampshire. At the same time, Rumball decided it was time to retire. He was
replaced by Garry Coward-Williams,[8] who had been Rumball's Group Editor.
Coward-Williams had been steering much of the editorial content and
presentation for several years, and now as Editor he is able to mould the
magazine so that it can compete effectively in a difficult market (for all
printed magazines, owing to online content being readily available).
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