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Home The Garden History of the Garden Henslow’s Garden
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Henslow’s Garden

John Henslow was 29 years old when he accepted the Chair of Botany in 1825.

Botany was at a very low ebb in the University at this time. No lectures had been given for 30 years and the Botanic Garden in the centre of the city was struggling.

Henslow’s energy and political skill persuaded the University that if serious experimental botany was to take its rightful place in the upsurge of natural science studies at Cambridge in the early 19th century, the Botanic Garden needed to move to a much larger site.

J.S Henslow
J.S Henslow Click for information

The extra acres would allow the cultivation for study of exciting new tree species then being described as a result of the exploration of western North America. No longer would a botanic garden be regarded as little more than a drug plant nursery for teaching medical students – Henslow’s view was that this Garden should be for the study of the plants themselves.

Henslow's Plan of the Botanic Garden
Henslow's Plan of the Botanic Garden Click for information

A green field 16-hectare site one mile south of the city centre was acquired by the University from Trinity Hall in 1831, but legal wrangles prevented immediate development. However, planting finally began in 1846, but the University only sanctioned, on grounds of expense, the development of the western half. Plans were drawn up by the first Garden Curator, Andrew Murray, in consultation with Henslow.

Murray’s plan consists of a sinuous path following the circumference of the Garden, bisected along an east-west axis by the Main Walk comprising majestic and stately coniferous trees. A belt of trees, grouped together in their families was planted outside the perimeter path. To the north of the Main Walk was a U-shaped lake and, to the south, a complex series of herbaceous Systematics Beds. This plan can still be enjoyed today as the Grade II* heritage landscape we see today. The design represents the ‘Gardenesque’ style of the time, combining both specimen plants and composed landscapes with great horticultural expertise.

Gates at western end of Main Walk
Gates at western end of Main Walk Click for information

There are a few later additions to this landscape: a Glasshouse Range along the northern boundary, a splendid fountain, designed by David Mellor, provides the eastern focal point to the Main Walk, and the Limestone Rock Garden, designed and built adjacent to the lake fifty years ago. The beautiful wrought iron gates of the original city-centre Botanic Garden were moved to head the Trumpington Road end of the Main Walk in 1909.

University of Cambridge Museums and Botanic Garden

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