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Essential
Architecture- United Kingdom
Sissinghurst Castle Garden |
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architect
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Vita Sackville-West |
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location
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in the Weald of Kent, near Cranbrook,
Goudhurst and Tenterden |
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date
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garden 1930s |
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style
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Elizabethan |
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construction
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Brick |
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type
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Castle |
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The Elizabethan tower at Sissinghurst. |
Sissinghurst Castle Garden
The garden at Sissinghurst Castle in the Weald of Kent, near
Cranbrook, Goudhurst and Tenterden, is owned and maintained by the
National Trust. It is among the most famous gardens in England. Indeed,
some garden enthusiasts would put it first.
Sissinghurst's garden was created in the 1930s by Vita
Sackville-West, poet and gardening writer, and her husband Harold
Nicolson, author and diplomat. Sackville-West was a writer on the
fringes of the Bloomsbury group who found her greatest popularity in the
weekly columns she contributed as gardening correspondent of The
Observer, which incidentally—for she never touted it—made her own garden
famous. Sissinghurst's garden is one of the best-loved in the whole of
the United Kingdom, drawing visitors from all over the world. The garden
itself is designed as a series of "rooms", each with a different
character of colour and/or theme, the walls being high clipped hedges
and many pink brick walls.
The site is ancient—its name and means a Saxon clearing in the
woods. A manorhouse surrounded by a moat was built here in the Middle
Ages. The original building was replaced in the late 15th century by a
large manor built by the Baker family—related by marriage to the
Sackvilles of Knole and hugely enlarged in the 1560s when it became the
centre of a 700 acre deer park. For Sackville-West, Sissinghurst and its
garden rooms came to be a poignant and romantic substitute for Knole,
reputedly the largest house in Britain, which as the only child of
Lionel, the 3rd Lord Sackville she would have inherited had she been a
male, but which had passed to her uncle as the male heir.
After the collapse of the Baker family in the 17th century, the
building had many uses: as a prisoner-of-war camp during the Seven
Years' War; as the workhouse for the Cranbrook Union; after which it
became homes for farm labourers.
Rose arbor in Sissinghurst's White garden room.Sackville-West and
Nicolson found Sissinghurst in 1930 after concern that their property
Long Barn, near Sevenoaks, Kent, was close to development over which
they had no control. Although Sissinghurst was derelict, they purchased
the ruins and the farm around it and began constructing the garden we
know today. The layout by Nicolson and planting by Sackville-West were
both strongly influenced by the gardens of Gertrude Jekyll and Edwin
Lutyens and also by Hidcote Manor Garden, designed and owned by Lawrence
Johnston. Sissinghurst was first opened to the public in 1938.
The National Trust took over the whole of Sissinghurst, its
garden, farm and buildings, in 1967. The garden epitomises the English
garden of the mid-20th century. It is now very popular and visitors
should try to visit during the less busy periods of the year and day.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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