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Gardens and Historic Plants of the Antebellum South

Gardens and Historic Plants of the Antebellum South

Previous price: $49.99 Current price: $49.95
Publication Date: December 1st, 2003
Publisher:
University of South Carolina Press
ISBN:
9781570035012
Pages:
321
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Description

A lavishly illustrated history of antebellum gardens and the plants that have become synonymous with southern gardening

Gardens and Historic Plants of the Antebellum South is a beautifully illustrated volume that features botanical prints, lithographs, garden plans, historic photographs, and contemporary photography to reveal the rich garden history of the South. A pictorial splendor as well as a treasure trove of cultural history, this volume is unique in its field. James R. Cothran invites plant enthusiasts, gardeners, and individuals interested in the history of the South to experience the glorious gardens that flourished in the region from 1820 through 1860.

During this period of enormous wealth, prosperous southerners built stately houses and established high-style gardens in towns and cities, as well as on plantations. The South's mild climate, long growing season, fertile soil, and traditional ties to the land fostered an abiding interest in gardening that encompassed the region.

Cothran's research included travel throughout the South to examine a multitude of historical sources--diaries, letters, travel accounts, garden plans, maps, paintings, photographs, nursery catalogs, garden books, and agricultural journals. In the resulting volume he describes the distinguishing features of antebellum gardens, sources for seed and plants, and dissemination of gardening information and fashion. Cothran also identifies landscape plans executed and plants cultivated during the golden age of horticulture in the South.

Of particular interest to contemporary gardeners is an extensive list of ornamentals--American natives, European favorites, and a wide selection of newly introduced exotics from China and Japan--that were hallmarks of antebellum gardens and that remain mainstays of southern gardens today. In addition, Cothran provides profiles of prominent gardeners, horticulturists, nurserymen, and writers who, in the decades preceding the American Civil War, were instrumental in shaping the horticultural and gardening legacy of the South.

About the Author

A native South Carolinian, James R. Cothran (1941-2012) was a practicing landscape architect, urban planner, and garden historian. He held degrees from Clemson University, the University of Georgia, and the Georgia Institute of Technology, where his academic training included ornamental horticulture, landscape architecture, and city planning. Cothran served as an adjunct professor at both the University of Georgia and Georgia State University, where he taught graduate courses on America's historic gardens and landscapes. A fellow in the American Society of Landscape Architects, Cothran served on the boards of the Southern Garden History Society, the Alliance for Historic Landscape Preservation, Trees Atlanta, and the Cherokee Garden Library, Center for the Study of Southern Garden History. A member of numerous professional organizations, Cothran was a frequent lecturer on southern garden history.