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Showing posts with label Kew Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kew Gardens. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 July 2015

Princess Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge (1797-1889)

Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge from La Belle Assemblée (1830)
Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge
from La Belle Assemblée (1830)
Profile

Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge (25 July 1797 – 6 April 1889) was the wife of Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, seventh son of George III.

Birth of a German princess

Princess Augusta Wilhelmina Louisa was born in Cassel on 25 July 1797, the third daughter of Frederick, Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel, and his wife Caroline Polyxena of Nassau-Usingen.1

A royal marriage

On 7 May 1818, Augusta married her second cousin, Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, the seventh son of George III, in Cassel.2

Adophus, Duke of Cambridge from A Biographical Memoir of Frederick,  Duke of York and Albany by John Watkins (1827)
Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge
from A Biographical Memoir of Frederick,
 Duke of York and Albany by John Watkins (1827)
Adolphus wrote soon after his engagement:
Every hour I feel that my esteem and attachment for my bride increase; and she really is everything both as to heart, mind and Person that I could wish.3
The marriage ceremony was repeated at the Queen’s Palace—Buckingham House—on 1 June.4

According to La Belle Assemblée:
A temporary altar was fixed in her [the Queen’s] blue drawing-room, and the Duke and Duchess were again united in presence of her Majesty, the Prince Regent, the royal Dukes, and the Princesses their sisters. The ceremony was performed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by the Bishop of London. A royal salute was, as usual, fired at this conclusion of the ceremony, and a splendid dinner, in honour of the nuptials, given by the Prince Regent.5
A happy marriage

Adolphus was more than twenty years older than Augusta, but it was a happy marriage. After the birth of Mary Adelaide, Adolphus’ sister Elizabeth, the Landgravine of Hesse-Homburg, wrote: 
Thank God my dearest Adolphus’ mind is at ease about the Duchess of Cambridge; she has given him another little girl…She was woefully alarmed about herself, which affected him, as he adores her to a degree that almost made him ill.6
Until 1837, Adolphus and Augusta lived in Hanover where the Duke was Governor General and, from 1831, Viceroy.

Family life

Adolphus and Augusta had three children: George William Frederick Charles (1819), Augusta Caroline (1822) and Mary Adelaide (1833). They liked to have their children with them and frequently provided dances and the like for their amusement. 

At the age of eleven, George was sent to England to be educated at Windsor. Augusta took Mary to England when she was three to stay at Windsor, but although she was always welcomed by William IV and Queen Adelaide, Augusta was not a good traveller and avoided the journey whenever possible.

Princess Mary Adelaide aged 4 from   A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck    by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900)
Princess Mary Adelaide aged 4 from
A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck
 by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900)
Return to England

In 1837, William IV died and Ernest, Duke of Cumberland, the Duke of Cambridge’s eldest surviving brother, became King of Hanover. On 1 September, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge left Hanover for England, where they took up residence in London at Cambridge House, 94 Piccadilly.

Cambridge Cottage

In the summer of 1838, Augusta and Adolphus moved to Cambridge Cottage in Kew. An eastern wing and a portico were added to the house which had been used many years before by Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, and Prince William, Duke of Clarence, later William IV. It is believed that George III gave the house to Adolphus in 1801 when he was made Duke of Cambridge.

Augusta loved Kew and spent a lot of her time outside, playing with her younger daughter, Mary Adelaide, and tending the garden. She drove a light pony carriage around the grounds. Her favourite seat was under a horse chestnut tree outside the dining room and throughout the summer, Augusta received visitors there and served tea in its shade.

Cambridge Cottage from A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900)
Cambridge Cottage from A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide
of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900)
A keen gardener

Augusta introduced two lilacs from her family home in Germany and sought out new plants for the garden including rhododendrons. Mary Adelaide grew up sharing her love of the garden. The family were lifelong friends with the director of the Botanic Gardens, Sir William Hooker, and later his son, Sir Joseph.

Visitors

Cambridge Cottage received many visitors including the young Prince of Wales, the future Edward VII, who rowed up the Thames to visit his aunt and cousin. It was here that the Prince of Wales attended his first dinner party. Maybe it was fond memories of this time that inspired the match between the Prince of Wales’ son, the future George V, and Mary Adelaide’s daughter, Mary of Teck.

What was the Duchess of Cambridge like?

Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge from La Belle Assemblée (1818)
Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge
from La Belle Assemblée (1818)
According to Kinloch-Cooke, the Duchess of Cambridge was 
...a handsome, stately lady somewhat above the average height of women...Her features were striking, and the dark eyes and eyebrows made her appearance most attractive...perfectly shaped hands...a charming smile.7
Augusta was an efficient and kindly mistress, managing the household herself. She loved reading and being read to, was a good conversationalist and had a keen interest in politics. She and Adolphus both enjoyed music and regularly attended the opera, but according to Princess Elizabeth, her “sister-in-law’s passion is the theatre.”8

Augusta liked to be busy, whether tending the garden or working on a piece of needlework or knitting. Like her husband, she was very charitable and strove to help the poor of Kew as well as supporting charities back in Germany.

Years of widowhood

Adolphus died in 1850. Augusta continued to live mostly at Kew. It was from Cambridge Cottage that Mary Adelaide was married to the Duke of Teck on 12 June 1866, in the local church at Kew. In the days running up to the wedding, there was a banquet and ball at Kew and two tents were erected in the garden in order to accommodate 140 people at dinner.

Princess Mary Adelaide from   A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck    by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900)
Princess Mary Adelaide from
A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck
 by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900)
During the London season, Augusta stayed at St James’ Palace. She entertained a great deal both at home and in London and was close to Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester, and sometimes dined with the Duchess of Inverness, the Duke of Sussex’s second wife.

Together with Mary Adelaide, she attended the opening of the Crystal Palace in 1854 and attended a ball in the Waterloo Gallery at Windsor.

A beloved old lady

By 1875, Augusta was an invalid. Her solace in her affliction was music and visits from her friends and family, especially Mary Adelaide and her children.

Mary Adelaide wrote of her mother:
She is carried down to the drawing-room every day about two o’clock, and after her early dinner at three is wheeled into the garden in a delightful chair, and when fine remains out till after seven, sometimes taking a turn in the great gardens, for her chair can either be drawn by hand or a pony.9
The chair was a gift from Queen Victoria.

Augusta survived her husband by almost 40 years, dying at St James’ Palace on 6 April 1889 at the age of 91. She was buried at St Anne’s Church, Kew, but her remains were later transferred, with those of her husband, to the royal vault in St George’s Chapel, Windsor.

Headshot of Rachel Knowles author with sea in background(2021)
Rachel Knowles writes clean/Christian Regency era romance and historical non-fiction. She has been sharing her research on this blog since 2011. Rachel lives in the beautiful Georgian seaside town of Weymouth, Dorset, on the south coast of England, with her husband, Andrew.

Find out more about Rachel's books and sign up for her newsletter here.

If you have enjoyed this blog and want to encourage me and help me to keep making my research freely available, please buy me a virtual cup of coffee by clicking the button below.

 

Notes
(1) Modern day Kassel – it was spelt Cassel until 1928.
(2) Augusta’s father was the son of Princess Mary, a daughter of George II, and sister of Frederick, Prince of Wales, George III’s father. This made Augusta’s father and George III first cousins and their children, Augusta and Adolphus, second cousins.
(3) In a letter from Adolphus to Lady Harcourt in A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900).
(4) La Belle Assemblée said 2 June.
(5) From La Belle Assemblée (August 1818).
(6) In a letter from Princess Elizabeth to a Miss Swinburne dated 4 December 1833 in A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900).
(7) In A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900) p26.
(8) In a letter by Princess Elizabeth in A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900).
(9) In a letter from Princess Mary of Teck to a friend dated 9 August 1875 in A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck by Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1900).

Sources used include:
La Belle Assemblée (1818 and 1830)
Kinloch-Cooke, Clement Sir, A Memoir of Princess Mary Adelaide of Teck (1900)
Cotton, AD, The Cambridge Cottage Garden, published as a supplement to The Journal of the Kew Guild (1942)
Palmer, Alan, Adolphus Frederick, Prince, first Duke of Cambridge, (1774-1850), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, 2004, online edn, May 2009, accessed 23 Mar 2013)

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Painting Paradise: The Art of the Garden – 2015 exhibition at the Queen’s Gallery

St James' Park and the Mall attributed to British School (c1745)
St James' Park and the Mall attributed to British School (c1745)
On Friday, I was invited to attend a bloggers' event to preview the new exhibition at the Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace: Painting Paradise – The Art of the Garden.  The exhibition is now open and runs until 11 October 2015.

Exhibition poster outside the Queen's Gallery

A garden walk through time

The exhibition portrays the history of the garden using paintings and objects from the Royal Collection. As you walk through the exhibition rooms, you are taken on a chronological tour of the development of the garden, starting with Paradise and ending with The Horticultural Garden. The displays include some lovely touches, such as sprays of artificial flowers, an arbour and a pergola, which help to create the atmosphere of being in a garden.

Paradise

Paradise display in Painting Paradise exhibition

Seven couples in a garden by Bukharan artist (c1510) in  Khamsa (Quintet) of Nava'i manuscript by Mir 'Ali Sir Neva'i Haeva'i (1492)
Seven couples in a garden by Bukharan artist (c1510) in
Khamsa (Quintet) of Nava'i manuscript by Mir 'Ali Sir Neva'i Haeva'i (1492)
acquired by George III c1797
The Sacred Garden

Bower display for The Sacred Garden

Christ and St Mary Magdalen at the Tomb  by Rembrandt van Rijn (1638)
Christ and St Mary Magdalen at the Tomb
by Rembrandt van Rijn (1638)
The Renaissance Garden

The selection of items on display in this section includes a rare copy of Thomas Hyll’s book entitled The Profitable Arte of Gardening (1586) and a picture of the family of Henry VIII showing the Great Garden at Whitehall Palace in the background.

The Profitable Arte of Gardening by Thomas Hyll (1586)
The Profitable Arte of Gardening by Thomas Hyll (1586)
Detail from Family of Henry VIII by British School (c1545)  showing Great Garden at Whitehall Palace in background
Detail from Family of Henry VIII by British School (c1545)
showing Great Garden at Whitehall Palace in background
The Botanic Garden

Charles II Presented with a Pineapple by British School (c1677)
Charles II Presented with a Pineapple by British School (c1677)
The picture of Charles II and the pineapple is fascinating. Although it is said to be the presentation of the first pineapple grown in England, both the King and the man on the left, thought to be his gardener, John Rose, had died before this was achieved! The house in the background may be that of Dorney House, a large house near Oatlands Park. Unusually, Charles II is pictured wearing fashionable clothes rather than ceremonial robes.

In the cabinets before you enter the next garden phase, there are some beautiful decorative objects from the Royal Collection. My favourites are the pieces of porcelain by Chelsea Porcelain Works with detailed botanical designs. There is also a very elaborate Minton soft porcelain pen tray that was given to Queen Victoria when she was a girl.

Circular plate c1755 from the Chelsea Porcelain Works
Circular plate from the Chelsea Porcelain Works (c1755)
Minton soft porcelain pen tray (c1833)  belonging to the young Queen Victoria
Minton soft porcelain pen tray (c1833)
belonging to the young Queen Victoria
The Baroque Garden

The Baroque Garden exhibition room

The Baroque Garden includes a superb example of Georgian recycling - a cabinet made around 1785 incorporating 17th century Florentine decorative panels.

Cabinet by Adam Weisweiler (c1785) incorporating 17th century Florentine decorative panels
Cabinet by Adam Weisweiler (c1785)
Hampton Court

As might be expected from the Royal Collection, there are lots of pictures of royal gardens including several of Hampton Court. Of special interest is the pair of sundials on display which were originally in the gardens, but which have now been replaced with replicas to conserve the originals.

Detail from A View of Hampton Court by Leonard Knyff (c1703)
Detail from A View of Hampton Court by Leonard Knyff (c1703)
Enlarged section of A View of Hampton Court by Leonard Knyff (c1703) - the red arrows show the place of the sundials in the gardens of Hampton Court
Enlarged section of A View of Hampton Court by Leonard Knyff (c1703)
The red arrows indicate the places of the sundials in the gardens
One of a pair of horizontal sundials  by Thomas Tompion (c1699)  which stood in the gardens of Hampton Court.  Replicas now stand in their place.
One of a pair of horizontal sundials
by Thomas Tompion (c1699)
which stood in the gardens of Hampton Court.
Replicas now stand in their place.
The tulip vases were used to display flowers and bulbs at Hampton Court Palace.

Tulip vase by Adriaen Kocks (c1694)
Tulip vase by Adriaen Kocks (c1694)
Bushy Park

I particularly liked the picture of the water gardens at Bushy Park, later home to William IV.

A view of the cascade, Bushy Park Water Gardens by studio of Marco Ricci (c1715)
A view of the cascade, Bushy Park Water Gardens
by studio of Marco Ricci (c1715)
Detail from A view of the cascade, Bushy Park Water Gardens  by studio of Marco Ricci (c1715)
Detail from A view of the cascade, Bushy Park Water Gardens
by studio of Marco Ricci (c1715)
Buckingham House

Buckingham House attributed to Adriaen van Diest (c1705)
Buckingham House attributed to Adriaen van Diest (c1705)
The Landscape Garden

The fiirst Landscape Garden exhibition room

The Sunflower Clock

There is a magnificent porcelain sunflower clock made by the Vincennes Porcelain Factory c1752 which was acquired by George IV in 1819. The sunflower is the symbol of Louis XIV of France, the Sun King. Behind this exhibit hangs a Gobelins tapestry.

The Sunflower Clock from Vincennes Porcelain Factory(c1752)
The Sunflower Clock from Vincennes Porcelain Factory(c1752)
The pair of armchairs is embroidered with designs by Mary Moser.

One of a pair of armchairs embroidered with designs  by Mary Moser attributed to the Royal School for   Embroidering Females under Mrs Nancy Pawsey (c1780)  Chair attributed to Robert Campbell
One of a pair of armchairs embroidered with designs
by Mary Moser attributed to the Royal School for
Embroidering Females under Mrs Nancy Pawsey (c1780)
Chair attributed to Robert Campbell
The Georgian period is well-represented in the exhibition, particularly in The Landscape Garden. There are some lovely paintings and prints of gardens including those at Carlton House, Chiswick, Stowe, Kew and Windsor.

Carlton House

A view of the garden &c at Carlton House in Pall Mall  by William Woollett (1760)
A view of the garden &c at Carlton House in Pall Mall
by William Woollett (1760)
The Earl of Burlington's gardens at Chiswick

A view of the back part of the Cassina & part of the Serpentine   river, terminated by the cascade - Lord Burlington's gardens   at Chiswick after John Donowell (c1753)
A view of the back part of the Cassina & part of the Serpentine
River, terminated by the cascade in the garden of the Earl of Burlington
 at Chiswick after John Donowell (c1753)
The gardens at Kew

The Gardens at Kew by Johan Jacob Schalch (1759)
The Gardens at Kew by Johan Jacob Schalch (1759)
Detail from The Gardens at Kew by Johan Jacob Schalch (1759)
Detail from The Gardens at Kew by Johan Jacob Schalch (1759)
The palace in the next two pictures is not the building we now call Kew Palace, but rather the White House that used to stand opposite.

A view of the Palace form the Lawn in the Royal Gardens at Kew  by William Elliott after William Woollett (1763)
A view of the Palace form the Lawn in the Royal Gardens at Kew
by William Elliott after William Woollett (1763)
 view of the palace form the north side of the Lake at Kew  by William Elliott after William Woollett (c1766)
A view of the palace form the north side of the Lake at Kew
by William Elliott after William Woollett (c1766)
A view of the wilderness at Kew  by Edward Rooker after William Marlow (c1763)
A view of the wilderness at Kew
by Edward Rooker after William Marlow (c1763)
Buckingham Palace

Buckingham Palace - the garden front from  across the lake  by Caleb Robert Stanley (1839)
Buckingham Palace - the garden front from  across the lake
by Caleb Robert Stanley (1839)
Windsor

The garden of the deputy ranger's lodge, Windsor Great Park  by Paul Sandby (c1798)
The garden of the deputy ranger's lodge, Windsor Great Park
by Paul Sandby (c1798)
Detail from The garden of the deputy ranger's lodge,  Windsor Great Park by Paul Sandby (c1798)
Detail from The garden of the deputy ranger's lodge,
Windsor Great Park by Paul Sandby (c1798)
The hermitage at Frogmore by Samuel Howitt (c1802)   The hermitage was designed by George III's daughter, Princess Elizabeth
The hermitage at Frogmore by Samuel Howitt (c1802)
The hermitage was designed by George III's daughter, Princess Elizabeth
The Norman Gateway and Moat Garden, Windsor Castle  by Paul Sandby (c1770)
The Norman Gateway and Moat Garden, Windsor Castle
by Paul Sandby (c1770)
St James' Park

  Detail from St James' Park and the Mall (shown at top of this post)  attributed to British School (c1745)
Detail from St James' Park and the Mall (shown at top of this post)
attributed to British School (c1745)
The Horticultural Garden

Some of my favourite items in the exhibition are the books of Humphry Repton’s designs for the gardens at Brighton Pavilion. The illustrations are beautiful, though frustratingly we are limited to just the two pages which are open. How I longed to turn the pages and see the other designs!

Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton West Front of the Pavilion   towards the Garden by Humphry Repton (1806)
Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton - West Front of the Pavilion
 towards the Garden by Humphry Repton (1806)
Detail from Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton - West Front  of the Pavilion towards the Garden by Humphry Repton (1806)
Detail from Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton - West Front
of the Pavilion towards the Garden by Humphry Repton (1806)
Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton  West Front of the Pavilion  towards the Garden   by Joseph Constantine Stadler after Humphry Repton (1808)
Designs for the Pavilion at Brighton
West Front of the Pavilion  towards the Garden
by Joseph Constantine Stadler after Humphry Repton (1808)
The final room contains an interesting array of objects including some jewellery belonging to Queen Victoria, a child’s wheelbarrow and a pair of fans.

The Princess Royal's fan (1856)
The Princess Royal's fan (1856)
Detail from Queen Victoria's birthday fan (c1858)
Detail from Queen Victoria's birthday fan (c1858)
If you love historic gardens, or are interested in seeing more from the Royal Collection, then this is an exhibition not to be missed!

For more information, go to the Royal Collection website.

All items photographed © The Royal Collection Trust
All photographs © Andrew Knowles

Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Kew Gardens - a Regency History guide to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

A view of the Pagoda, Kew Gardens
A view of the Pagoda, Kew Gardens (2009)
Where are they?

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, often referred to as Kew Gardens, are in Kew in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. Kew Palace is situated within the gardens.

History

Amongst the Georgian royals there were a number of keen gardeners: Queen Caroline; her son Prince Frederick and his wife Princess Augusta; and their son George III’s wife, Queen Charlotte.

Queen Caroline developed the gardens around Richmond Lodge whilst Prince Frederick developed the gardens at Kew. After Prince Frederick’s death, Princess Augusta continued to follow her husband’s plans for the gardens. In 1759, she employed William Aiton to develop her botanical garden and this is considered to be the foundation of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

Bluebells in front of Kew Palace
Bluebells in front of Kew Palace (2013)
The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew now include both of these royal estates – Richmond GardensGeorge III and Kew Gardens, separated by Love Lane. They were combined into one estate by George III who inherited Richmond from his grandfather in 1760 and Kew Gardens from his mother in 1772.

The botanic gardens were given to the state in 1841 and further land was donated in subsequent years. The gardens now cover over 300 acres of land and serve as both a scientific institution and a public park.

Georgian connection

Princess Caroline

The future George II and Queen Caroline started using Richmond Lodge as their summer residence in 1719. The gardens included a number of exotic plants and trees including orange trees, pomegranates, nut trees, myrtles and bay trees.

Caroline consulted Alexander Pope and commissioned William Kent to build various buildings in the grounds including a new pavilion at Richmond, a Gothic Hermitage and Merlin’s Cave.

Prince Frederick and Princess Augusta

George II’s son Frederick and his wife Augusta lived a short distance away at Kew. Frederick had a passion for botany and with the help of Lord Bute, he started to collect exotic plants and trees.

After Frederick’s death in 1751, Augusta continued to develop her husband’s plant collection, using about 9 acres of the Kew estate as a botanical garden.

Augusta continued to accept Lord Bute’s support and appointed William Aiton as her head gardener. She commissioned Sir William Chambers to design various buildings around the estate including the Pagoda, the Ruined Arch and the Orangery.

The Pagoda, Kew Gardens (2014)
The Pagoda, Kew Gardens (2014)
Queen Charlotte

George III and Queen Charlotte used Richmond Lodge and then the White House at Kew as their country retreat. Queen Charlotte shared her mother-in-law’s love of botany and continued to develop the gardens. Sir Joseph Banks often visited and brought a collection of over 1000 new seeds and plants from the South Seas.

Sir Joseph was the unofficial director of Kew and ensured that the study of plants at Kew was done scientifically. Aiton started to create a catalogue of all the plants being introduced, the Hortus Kewensis (1789).

Franz Bauer became the resident artist at Kew and taught botanical drawing to the princesses.

Part of the ceiling detail from the tea room  in Queen Charlotte's cottage painted by Princess Elizabeth
Part of the ceiling detail from the tea room
in Queen Charlotte's cottage painted by Princess Elizabeth (2014)
What can you see today?

Highlights to look out for in the gardens include:

Queen Charlotte’s Cottage

Queen Charlotte's Cottage, Kew
Queen Charlotte's Cottage, Kew (2014)
 • The Pagoda

The Pagoda, Kew
The Pagoda, Kew Gardens (2014)
• The Ruined Arch

The Ruined Arch, Kew
The Ruined Arch, Kew Gardens (2014)
• The Orangery

The Orangery, Kew
The Orangery, Kew Gardens (2014)

Headshot of Rachel Knowles author with sea in background(2021)
Rachel Knowles writes clean/Christian Regency era romance and historical non-fiction. She has been sharing her research on this blog since 2011. Rachel lives in the beautiful Georgian seaside town of Weymouth, Dorset, on the south coast of England, with her husband, Andrew.

Find out more about Rachel's books and sign up for her newsletter here.

If you have enjoyed this blog and want to encourage me and help me to keep making my research freely available, please buy me a virtual cup of coffee by clicking the button below.

Last visited: June 2013.

If you enjoyed this article, you might also like my guides to Queen Charlotte's Cottage and Kew Palace.

Sources used include:
Groom, Susanne and Prosser, Lee, Kew Palace, the official illustrated history (2006)
Kew Gardens website

Photographs © RegencyHistory.net