This magnificently illustrated people's history celebrates the
extraordinary feats of cultivation by the working class in Britain, even
if the land they toiled, planted, and loved was not their own. Spanning
more than four centuries, from the earliest records of the laboring
classes in the country to today, Margaret Willes's research unearths
lush gardens nurtured outside rough workers' cottages and horticultural
miracles performed in blackened yards, and reveals the ingenious,
sometimes devious, methods employed by determined, obsessive, and
eccentric workers to make their drab surroundings bloom. She also
explores the stories of the great philanthropic industrialists who
provided gardens for their workforces, the fashionable rich stealing the
gardening ideas of the poor, alehouse syndicates and fierce rivalries
between vegetable growers, flower-fanciers cultivating exotic blooms on
their city windowsills, and the rich lore handed down from gardener to
gardener through generations.
This is a sumptuous record of the
myriad ways in which the popular cultivation of plants, vegetables, and
flowers has played-and continues to play-an integral role in everyday
British life.
The Gardens of the British Working Class - Margaret Willes
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£13.99