The Plant House University Botanic GardenGeneral information about the Cambridge University Botanic Garden can be found on Wikipedia.
The Garden’s own web site is:
http://www.botanic.cam.ac.uk/Botanic/Home.aspx
An unusual feature is The Brick Tree. This is a pear tree which after a storm in the 1960s was filled up with tar-covered bricks to stop the tree from rotting. (See 111 Places in Cambridge You Shouldn’t Miss p.38).
A B Gray noted in 1921 that the gates, erected in May 1909, were originally those of the old Physic Garden in Downing Street.
1901 census: University Botanic gardens Bateman Street
Richard Irwin Lynch
Harriet
Edith K, 16, b Cambridge
Richard S, 12, b Cambridge
Elizabeth R Revell, 22, servant, b Cambs
Gardeners House University Botanic Gardens:
Edgar John Allard, 24, foreman Botanic gardens, b Kent
Herbert Sutcliffe, boarder, 19, journeyman gardener, b Yorks
Sidney G Wild, 23, journeyman gardener, b Warwicks
William N Wright, 24, traveller horticultural specialist, b Derby
1911 census:
Richard Irwin-Lynch, 60, curator Botanic Gardens, b Cornwall
Harriett, 53, b Devon
Rhoda May Elvin, servant, 18, servant, b Cambridge
John William Temple, head, 23, gardener, b Herts
Alfred Bertram Mellis, boarder, 20, b Stowmarket
Harold Allgood, 16, boarder, b Trumpington
1921 The Bothy
Ralph Edwin Thoday, 26, gardener Univ Botanic Gardens, b Brampton
Leonard Cranfield, lodger, 30, gardener Univ Botanic Gardens, b Cambridge
George Hill, lodger, 20, gardener Univ Botanic Gardens, b Babraham
The article “Ralph Edwin Thoday: his horticultural achievements and the rediscovery of the Thoday’s Quarrendon Apple” can be found in CAS Vol CXIV 2025.
Thoday was born at Huntingdon, son of a gardener and grandson of a farmer from Reed Farm, Willingham. One of his relations established Thoday’s Seeds. Another Thoday ran an extensive vinery opposite Willingham village school. He trained and worked as a gardner in several counties before serving as a sergeant in the RAMeC in WWI. In 1920 he joined the staff of the Botanic Gardens in Cambridge.
After three years he move to Kent to gain experience of fruit growing. He then became an instructor at the Lord Wandsworth Agricultural College in Hampshire.
In 1928 he was appointed Head Gardener of the Kitchen Garden of St John’s College, Cambridge. This was situated at 18 Madingley Road.
22/7/1922 The prospect of a serious deficiency at the Botanic Garden is almost a certainty; it is expected to be about £1,362. A suggestion has been made that the public should be charged a small fee for admission, but there is a natural objection to adopting this course, the garden having been open so long and so extensively used by the public. A suggested alternative is that the garden should close at 5.30. A further proposal is that the principal greenhouses should be closed and their contents sold. Something will have to be done. The Garden practically ranks as a public park. We are in danger of losing that park (Cambridge Press)
2022 Painting by Hannah Davies
Do you have any information about the people or places in this article? If so, then please let us know using the Contact page or by emailing capturingcambridge@
This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0