Mr Roscoe's garden

Page 1


gardens were once again coming under siege. The city had

tropical plants with shards, shredding the soft leaves of the

caught up with them again, just as it had at Mount Pleasant.

bananas and the ferns, exposing the tropical orchids to a cold

Smoke was drifting over the high walls from the nearby

northern night. The next day it was clear that many plants

housing and the building of a gas works and a marshalling

were lost, but those still standing were quickly dispatched

yard close by seemed the final ignominy. The wealth of the

into the hundreds of glasshouses round the

city was ebbing away – all those private orchid collections

city; ironically, to those abandoned by the former homes

in mansions around the parks were being broken up to

of the wealthy orchid enthusiasts, the one time heirs of

pay death duties. One of these was the estate of Holbrook

Mr Roscoe’s first garden.

Gaskell, which, along with his fine orchids, passed into the hands of the Corporation. During the Great Depression of 1929, 30% of Liverpool

The orchids were removed to Sudley, the former home of the Holts, one of Liverpool’s leading Unitarian families, whose forebears were amongst the first Proprietors of the gardens.

was living below the poverty line, with 14% only just above

Only the palms, the giraffes of the plant world, remained

it. Who cared about a botanic garden? The railings that once

at Wavertree in the one tall house still standing. There they

framed the glasshouse were severed from their stumps for

stayed in splendid isolation until the sixties, tended by a

melting down. Then came the Second World War, the pools

gardener named Mark Hughes who regularly dispatched

in the garden were filled in for fear that their reflections

the smaller specimens round the city to furnish the foyers

would help the navigation of night flying enemy aircraft.

and functions of civic life. The echo of this tradition lives on;

For want of better lodgings, a group of young soldiers were

Liverpool is one of the only Councils with an in-house floral

billeted in the Curator’s Lodge which had now all but fallen

decoration service.

into disrepair. One winter night they were short of wood

There was another, smaller casualty of the war; Mr Roscoe’s

to build a fire. They were freezing cold, and a stack

personal copy of his great Monandrian Plants, the very book

of abandoned old ledgers, browning and dry, that one

that he had asked his daughter to fetch down from the shelf of

of them found in a corner must have seemed a good

his study at Lodge Lane to show a young German artist. This

alternative. So they burnt them. In a mirroring of the fate

copy, having inexplicably found its way into the bookshop of

of so many of the badly kept herbarium specimens at the

Henry Young and Sons of South Castle Street, was destroyed

turn of the century, the young men unintentionally burnt all

during an air-raid.

the Botanic Gardens’s records kept since the beginnings

Then there was the garden’s Herbarium. Though now

at Mount Pleasant. They burnt the careful annotations of

housed in the splendour of the Museum it was arguably at

the Shepherds, of Birschell, of Richardson, the biography

most risk right in the city centre. It was saved by a mix of

of the garden, its diary; plants gifted, plants dispatched;

foresight and luck. After the bombing of Bristol Museum, a

plants coming into flower; plants dying away, wages paid to

Government edict had been issued for all Curators of major

gardeners, their names, works carried out, monies paid. Of

provincial museums to remove collections to safety. Mr

course these young men cannot be blamed. The story of the

Stansfield, the then Curator of Natural History, had to pack

burning of the botanic records is from an oral source – John

up in haste. Short of time and space he chose to take what

Edmondson’s parents had friends who saw what happened,

he believed to be most intrinsically valuable. He chose the

or the aftermath of it. He remembers these friends visiting

Herbarium. This garden of fourteen thousand desiccated

his parents years ago before he worked in Liverpool and

blooms; each a distant memory of a far off place and time was

telling the story, but sadly he cannot remember who they

taken to a secret location in Wales and silently lived out the

were or how they came to be witnesses to such a poignant

war several miles underground in a mine shaft. The collection

event. He only wishes that he did.

of insects that Stansfield had to leave behind did not survive.

16 What should have been the death knell of the gardens

They, like Mr Roscoe’s book, were destroyed in the May bombing campaign that devastated Liverpool to its core. Mr Stansfield’s love of Liverpool’s botanic history was

happened on the night of November 29th 1940. Britain

later sealed in the articles he wrote in the 1950s about Mr

was at war and the Luftwaffe were circling in the skies over

Roscoe as a botanist, still to this day, incredibly, the only

Wavertree. They had the adjacent marshalling yard and

published, academic works on the subject. His papers were

gasworks in their sights and dispatched their load. A stray

made possible by the gift of Mr Roscoe’s letters to the city by

bomb missed and fell in the park. The impact shattered the

his relative Mrs A.M. Roscoe who was touched by the way he

dome of the Botanic Gardens glasshouse, showering the

had been remembered at the centenary of his death in 1931.


Hundreds of these letters are on botanical subjects. They

into oblivion and the wealthy had all but fled. Although

are now housed in the City Archives though only accessible

I’m sure from what I’ve been told that the glasshouse at

to personal readers. Due to lack of resources none have

Wavertree could have been repaired, Conn abandoned it

been computer catalogued.

to the palms. He earmarked the outdoor gardens there

17

for a road safety scheme, where children could be taught traffic drill. Though it was never built, his design still exists

It would be entirely understandable at this point if

in the city archives, the mock roads whimsically following

Liverpool’s living botanic story (the photosynthesising,

the graceful curves of the scroll-beds. Sometimes I have

sap rising one) had ended here. It could all so easily

wondered whether secretly Mr Conn was glad to leave

have faded to the delicate browns and greys of the dried,

behind the great glass hulk there; half broken monument to

institutionalised life enjoyed by the garden’s former library

a now redundant Empire. Citing the problems of smoke and

and herbaria. That the living botanical collections prevailed

encroaching housing, as Shepherd had done when moving

post-war is due, I think, to the vision of one man. His name

the first garden, Conn rebuilt his new botanic garden from

was Percival William Henry Conn A.H.R.H.S, P.P.Inst.

scratch, further out of the city on the Harthill Estate, in

P.A, L.I.L.A and he was an ‘Old Kew-ite’ from the south

Calderstones Park which the Corporation had bought from

who had spent much of his career in Coventry Municipal

the Bibby family, whose descendants had also been original

Parks. Mr Conn or ‘Sir’ as he was known by most (even

Proprietors of the first garden. The Botanic Gardens and

to senior management) was the grey eminence behind

plant collections were on the move again.

Liverpool’s post war botanic renaissance. Sam Youd,

It took over thirteen years for Mr Conn to build his new

now Head of Gardens at Tatton Park and an apprentice

botanic garden. In the intervening years he built up the

in Liverpool Parks in the early sixties described Mr Conn

collection, both indoor and outdoor. He kept it in people’s

as a formidable figure. He said that even in the height of

minds with what seem to me, inspired moves; he literally

summer Sir sported a long black cloak that made him look

wowed ‘em with media friendly plants. In 1953, the city

like the figure in the Sandeman sherry ads. With a cheroot

was celebrating the coronation of their new young queen;

permanently hanging form the corner of his mouth and a

it was also the bi-centenary of Mr Roscoe’s birth. Perhaps to

strong southern accent he was also pretty unintelligible to

mark both occasions Mr Conn and the Garden Committee

his local workforce.

subscribed to one of the very last plant hunting expeditions

Mr Conn lived in a tied house ‘The Bridge House’ on

made by the legendary Frank Kingdon Ward. Ward was off to

Ibbotson’s Lane in Sefton Park, the proximity to the nursery

Burma, on what would in time prove to be one of the last visits

of which struck terror in the hearts of the apprentice

there by a Western botanist before the country descended into

gardeners who worked there, including Steve Perkins, a

the lock-down of what is a now a brutal military regime. Ward

former Deputy Director of Parks, who also remembers him

was renowned for finding new rhododendron species; maybe

well. Conn had a housekeeper and a chauffeur driven car

the thought of these gracing the outdoor collection of his

at his ready disposal. An acre and a half vegetable garden

new botanic gardens were in Mr Conn’s mind? We may never

tended by three brave full-time gardeners provided produce

know, but because of the city’s patronage Ward and his young

for his table and a separate cutting garden meant vases of

wife Jean set sail from Liverpool that November on the M.V

flowers were always a feature in his home. Fresh fruit was his

Staffordshire, a ship of the Bibby line – Port Said, Port Sudan,

for the eating all year round; half a Council greenhouse was

Aden, Colombo, final destination Rangoon. The Kingdon-

dedicated to growing peaches, grapes and the like for his

Wards sent back rhododendrons, Sorbus, new orchids and a

entertaining. Following in the fashion of earlier Directors of

new lily, Lilium arboricola, the world’s first known tree-dwelling

Parks, Mr Guttridge included, he seems to have taken on the

(epiphytic) lily. The ‘Burmese Lily’ as it became known caused

mantle of Liverpool’s Botanic Curator. He certainly directed

a sensation and flowered in only two places in England – in

its future.

Liverpool and at RHS Wisley, before being lost to cultivation.

I’ve often heard people talk about the genius of John

The lily became a myth; it has been described to me as the

Shepherd, the very first Curator of the Botanic Gardens,

Holy Grail for lily lovers; it has never been seen since and the

but Shepherd’s was a garden upon whom good fortune

only image I have found of it is of the Liverpool flower – its pale

shone; he built it up at a time when money was flooding

head haloed with darkness, as if emerging from a long night.

into the city. 130 odd years later Percy Conn built his new version when Liverpool was on its knees, almost bombed

The Burmese Lily grabbed the headlines and captured people’s hearts; and for a moment Liverpool was


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