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Discover the storied history of the Garden Museum’s medieval building on your next visit.

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The history of the Garden Museum dates from the medieval era to the present day.

The Garden Museum was founded by Rosemary and John Nicholson in 1977 to rescue the abandoned St Mary-at-Lambeth Church, which was due for demolition. The church is the burial place of John Tradescant (c1570 – 1638), the first great gardener and plant hunter in British history. His magnificent tomb is the centrepiece of the courtyard garden, designed to reflect Tradescant’s life and spirit.

Museum Timeline

1062

1062

St Mary-at-Lambeth Church

A wooden church is built on the site of the current Garden Museum by Goda, sister of Edward the Confessor; the Doomsday Book records 29 tenancies in her manor. Later in the century it is rebuilt in stone and becomes the church to the Archbishops with their London lodgings next door at Lambeth Palace.

1086

1086

Doomsday Survey

The Church St Mary-at-Lambeth is mentioned in the Domesday survey of King William I.

1377

1377

Medieval Tower

The church is rebuilt in stone, including a new bell tower; it is repaired in 1834–35 but otherwise the tower is original to the 14th Century.

1500s

1500s

Tombs and Monuments

The prestige of the church is reflected in the wills of many citizens who ordered tombs for themselves, particularly in the Chancel. The most significant is the chantry tomb of Hugh Peyntwyn (d.1504), which is the earliest known example of a new design of wall monument associated with the royal workshops. Opposite is a monument of the same type to John Mompesson (d.1524). St Mary-at-Lambeth is unique in having two monuments of this type. These can be seen in the Ark Gallery.

1638

1638

Celebrated Locals

Death of celebrated gardener and plant collector John Tradescant. He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary-at-Lambeth, his local parish.

1647

1647

Artist’s View

Wenceslaus Hollar is thought to have stood on top of the tower of St Mary-at-Lambeth to draw his 1647 ‘Prospect of London and Westminster.’

1662

1662

Monumental Memorials

John Tradescant the Younger dies. His widow, Hester, erects a decorated tomb in the churchyard as a family memorial.

1817

1817

Mutiny on the Bounty

Admiral William Bligh, who lived at 100 Lambeth Road, dies and is buried in his family tomb in the churchyard.

1851-2

1851-2

Victorian Reconstruction

The body of the church is continually rebuilt and developed over the centuries but, decisively, in 1851-2 the aisles and nave are rebuilt by Philip Charles Hardwick, an architect prominent in the construction of banks and railway stations. His father, Sir Philip Hardwick, designed the Euston Arch. Hardwick’s work is described by the Museum of London Archaeology Service as “an almost complete rebuilding of the old body of the church”. The most eye-catching survivals are four of eight corbels in the ceiling of the nave, these are a mix of medieval and Victorian construction.

1854

1854

Final Capacity

The churchyard closes to new burials; it is estimated that there are over 26,000 burials on the site of the church and the level of the site has risen in consequence.

1900

1900

Immersion Font

One of the few twentieth-century interventions takes place with the insertion of an immersion font, said to be one of only two examples in Anglican churches in England, and a baptistery at the base of the tower.

1941

1941

The Blitz

Bombing during the Second World War damages the church, including the stained-glass windows, and breaks up the altar donated in 1888 by Sir Henry Doulton as a memorial to his wife. Doulton’s factory of ornamental ceramic ware stands just 300 metres to the south of the Museum.

1950

1950

Stained Glass Repairs

The stained glass damaged in the war is replaced by plain glass and panels by Francis Stephens (1921 – 2002), including a replica of the “Pedlar’s Window”.

1972

1972

Deconsecration

The church is made redundant as a consequence of its dilapidation and gloom, and also because of changes in the population settlement of the parish. The area by the riverside has become derelict and under-populated, and the Vicar wants a church closer to where the congregation lives. In 1969 Lambeth Council designated the area around Lambeth Palace as one of the borough’s first conservation areas.

Soon after the Church Commissioners obtained the necessary consents for demolition; the altar, bells, and pews are removed.

1976

1976

Rescue and Repair

During a visit to the Church of St-Mary-at-Lambeth, Rosemary and John Nicholson were shocked to find it boarded up and awaiting demolition. Drawn there by the historic tomb of the Tradescants, they were determined to save both the building and the monument. They established the Tradescant Trust and secured a 99-year lease from the Diocese of Southwark, who remain our landlords today. The rescue and repair of the church soon became one of the landmark architectural conservation projects of its time.

1977

1977

Establishing the Museum of Garden History

Following the successful campaign to save the site, Rosemary and John turned their attention to creating a new kind of museum. They envisioned a space dedicated to Britain’s gardening heritage, inspired by the lives and work of the Tradescants. With the Tradescant Trust in place, the Museum of Garden History begins to take shape. Donations from supporters started to build a collection, laying the groundwork for what would become the world’s first museum dedicated to the history of gardens and gardening.

1980s

1980s

Living Garden History

In 1980 a 16th century style knot garden was established at the centre of the Museum, designed and created by Lady Salisbury, the President of the Garden Museum. It offered a quiet place for contemplation in the hustle and bustle of central London.

1990

1990

Creating the Collection

In 1990 the Museum planned for expansion, both of the collection and the space to display it. Designs were drawn up for a mezzanine level so artefacts could be put in a modern display. A major collection of tools was acquired from William Brown of Beckenham for £10,260. 13 items were acquired in the sale of Lord McAlpine’s estate, including the 17th century watering pot, at the time the most expensive of its kind in the world.

Later the same year an exhibition of garden tools began a national tour of garden centres, an innovative idea in a time when Museums tended to distrust commerce.

2008

2008

Establishing Exhibitions

The Church continued to be a bare shell, with a floor of wood and earth, and no heating, lighting, or drainage of its own. It was not possible to display works of art or precious artifacts as these require secure spaces, and protection from light and changes in the environment. In 2008, Dow Jones Architects were winners of a competition for young architects to design a new gallery for temporary exhibitions.

2015

2015

Making a Museum

In 2015 the Garden Museum closed for 18 months to undergo a large redevelopment project, which resulted in a much larger space for the permanent collection to be displayed as well as two new learning spaces, a new café and two new gardens, designed by Christopher Bradley-Hole and Dan Pearson.

The internal structure of the Museum has been built using a prefabricated timber technology pioneered in Switzerland, which stands up by itself, so does not require digging foundations, or fixings into the old walls. It has also been designed to let as much natural light in as is possible, creating an air of calm which continues into the extension. We can now display the collection of garden history in addition to exhibitions, and have a gallery in which treasures of Tradescant’s Ark can be seen.

2017

2017

Archbishops’ Tombs

On Easter Sunday 2017, a remarkable discovery was reported by the Sunday Telegraph: a hidden vault beneath the chancel of St Mary’s, Lambeth, containing up to 30 lead coffins—among them, as many as five Archbishops of Canterbury. The vault was uncovered during construction work on the Tradescant’s Ark gallery, when contractors lifted a loose stone in the floor and revealed a staircase descending into darkness. In the crypt below, lead coffins were visible, one bearing a glittering Archbishop’s mitre. Among those believed to be buried there is Archbishop Bancroft, who died in 1610 after overseeing the translation of the King James Bible for King James I. The discovery came as a surprise because it was long assumed that all remains had been removed during the Victorian restoration of 1851, which cleared most burials from the church—including those of Elias Ashmole and the Boleyn family. While six Archbishops were known to have chosen St Mary’s as their resting place, their tombs were thought lost.

2018

2018

New Green Space

Plans are announced for Lambeth Green project, which will transform 5.3 acres into vibrant parks, public green spaces, and a landmark garden for all right next to the Garden Museum. At its heart, a pioneering pavilion made from recycled London buildings will train the next generation of horticulturists while greening the city.

2020s

2020s

Exhibition Expansion

The Garden Museum mounts world-class exhibitions, welcoming record number of visitors year on year. From recreating Derek Jarman’s iconic garden in Dungeness in 2020, to an immersive display Frank Walter’s radical Antiguan art.

2021

2021

Acquiring an Artists’ Garden

Benton End was majority gifted to the Garden Museum. Once the Suffolk home of celebrated artist and gardener Sir Cedric Morris (1889 – 1982) and artist, Arthur Lett-Haines (1894–1978); lifelong partners, who met on Armistice Night in 1918.

Cedric and Lett established the East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing creating one of the most remarkable art schools of the period, a place ‘outside the system‘.  One of the first pupils was the 17-year old Lucian Freud; one of the last, Maggi Hambling. The artists were often joined by friends such as Elizabeth David, Vita Sackville-West, Constance Spry, Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears.  by two exceptional Patrons with the intention that the house and garden might be revived and opened to the public once again.

2023

2023

Branching Out

Arts Council England recognises the Garden Museum as a National Portfolio Organisation. This brings ongoing investment and allows the museum to open its Nave exhibitions and family crafts area to everyone for free.

The Museum establishes Branch Out, a programme of free creative workshops, and Tuesday Tots for local families to drop in and explore the museum.

THE TRADESCANTS

Nestled in the Courtyard Garden of the Garden Museum stands the magnificent 17th-century tomb of John Tradescant and his son – pioneers, plant hunters, and creators of Britain’s first public museum.

John Tradescant the Elder (c.1570–1638)

Tradescant rose from obscurity to become gardener to Robert Cecil, the 1st Earl of Salisbury, creating an enviable scheme for Hatfield House. He was later was gardener to Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I. His search for plants took him from the Arctic Circle to Algeria, bringing home rare specimens and remarkable stories. In autumn 1611, he toured the gardens and nurseries of the Low Countries, then continued to Paris, where he visited Jean Robin at the Jardin du Roi. As well as the regular exchange of plants, Tradescant began collecting natural history specimens from across the globe.

By 1615, Tradescant was employed as the gardener for Edward, Lord Wotton at St Augustine’s Abbey in Canterbury. Here he created a 20-acre garden and filled it with rare plants, such as a pomegranate which hadn’t been seen in the country before.

Tradescant’s Ark

Settling in Lambeth in 1629, he created a home with a difference. Then a semi-rural location, Lambeth was close to the Thames with good transport links to the city. Tradescant rented three acres and a house from the Dean of Canterbury Cathedral. Boasting a botanical garden and displays of his extraordinary collection which he opened to the public, it became known as “The Ark”. Entry was 6d and visitors could expect a captivating ‘cabinet of curiosities’ including shells and a dodo skull.

John Tradescant the Younger (1608–1662)

Tradescant’s son continued the family legacy, travelling to America for new plants and succeeding his father as Royal Gardener. Upon his death, his widow commissioned the richly carved tomb in St Mary’s churchyard, depicting their adventures and achievements.

Together, the Tradescants dreamed of “a well-mulched Eden on the Thames,” gathering wonders from three continents into one extraordinary home.

CAPTAIN BLIGH

Captain Bligh, the Breadfruit Voyage, and Colonial Histories

In the Garden Museum’s churchyard stands the Grade II* listed tomb of Captain William Bligh (1754–1817), best known for the mutiny on HMS Bounty in 1789. His epitaph commemorates him as “the celebrated navigator who first transplanted the breadfruit tree from Otaheite [Tahiti] to the West Indies.”

The breadfruit mission was commissioned by Sir Joseph Banks to supply a cheap, reliable food source for enslaved Africans on Britain’s Caribbean plantations. This was not a humanitarian gesture, but part of sustaining the transatlantic slavery system after supply chains from North America were disrupted. In Tahiti, Bligh and Kew-trained gardener David Nelson cultivated over a thousand young plants; just weeks into the return voyage, his second-in-command, Fletcher Christian, led a mutiny, forcing Bligh and 18 men into an open boat for a 3,000-mile journey to safety.

Bligh later returned to Tahiti with HMS Providence and Assistant, delivering 1,281 breadfruit plants to the Caribbean. He recorded Tahitian society in detail, but these observations took place within a context of imperial expansion and unequal power. His tomb remains a focal point in the Museum garden—an artefact of both extraordinary seafaring skill and the legacies of Britain’s colonial and slavery-based economy.

more to explore

Benton End

The Garden Museum is restoring the former home of artist plantsman Cedric Morris

Benton End

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