sbg.org.uk - History









Search Preview

History 1 – Sheffield Botanical Gardens

sbg.org.uk
HomeInformationOpening TimesHow To Find UsGarden EtiquetteFlorilegiumGarden ContactsFriends of Botanical G
.org.uk > sbg.org.uk

SEO audit: Content analysis

Language Error! No language localisation is found.
Title History 1 – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Text / HTML ratio 75 %
Frame Excellent! The website does not use iFrame solutions.
Flash Excellent! The website does not have any flash contents.
Keywords cloud Gardens Sheffield Botanical Trust Marnock style Garden Friends plant plants Park Society gardenesque Robert Town public opened landscape million education
Keywords consistency
Keyword Content Title Description Headings
Gardens 51
Sheffield 30
Botanical 23
Trust 9
Marnock 9
style 8
Headings
H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6
1 0 9 2 0 0
Images We found 3 images on this web page.

SEO Keywords (Single)

Keyword Occurrence Density
Gardens 51 2.55 %
Sheffield 30 1.50 %
Botanical 23 1.15 %
Trust 9 0.45 %
Marnock 9 0.45 %
style 8 0.40 %
Garden 8 0.40 %
Friends 7 0.35 %
plant 7 0.35 %
plants 6 0.30 %
Park 6 0.30 %
Society 6 0.30 %
gardenesque 5 0.25 %
Robert 5 0.25 %
Town 5 0.25 %
public 5 0.25 %
opened 5 0.25 %
landscape 5 0.25 %
million 5 0.25 %
education 5 0.25 %

SEO Keywords (Two Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density
of the 23 1.15 %
the Gardens 21 1.05 %
Botanical Gardens 18 0.90 %
Sheffield Botanical 14 0.70 %
for the 11 0.55 %
in the 11 0.55 %
the Sheffield 9 0.45 %
Gardens were 9 0.45 %
The Gardens 8 0.40 %
to the 7 0.35 %
as the 7 0.35 %
from the 6 0.30 %
Robert Marnock 5 0.25 %
Town Trust 5 0.25 %
to their 4 0.20 %
as a 4 0.20 %
the Botanical 4 0.20 %
opened in 4 0.20 %
the first 4 0.20 %
Sheffield Town 4 0.20 %

SEO Keywords (Three Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
Sheffield Botanical Gardens 12 0.60 % No
of the Gardens 5 0.25 % No
the Sheffield Botanical 5 0.25 % No
the Botanical Gardens 4 0.20 % No
Sheffield Town Trust 4 0.20 % No
The Gardens were 3 0.15 % No
the Gardens were 3 0.15 % No
known as the 3 0.15 % No
Botanical Gardens Trust 3 0.15 % No
as the Sheffield 3 0.15 % No
one of the 3 0.15 % No
Botanical Gardens were 2 0.10 % No
Joseph Paxton of 2 0.10 % No
to produce a 2 0.10 % No
of the 19th 2 0.10 % No
Gardens to their 2 0.10 % No
Botanical and Horticultural 2 0.10 % No
Sheffield Botanical and 2 0.10 % No
appointed as the 2 0.10 % No
was appointed as 2 0.10 % No

SEO Keywords (Four Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
as the Sheffield Botanical 3 0.15 % No
known as the Sheffield 3 0.15 % No
Sheffield Botanical Gardens Trust 3 0.15 % No
the Sheffield Botanical Gardens 3 0.15 % No
Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural 2 0.10 % No
the Botanical Gardens Sheffield 2 0.10 % No
produce a bid for 2 0.10 % No
a bid for the 2 0.10 % No
bid for the Gardens 2 0.10 % No
Dorothy Fox Education Centre 2 0.10 % No
Gardens to their former 2 0.10 % No
of the Botanical Gardens 2 0.10 % No
Friends of the Botanical 2 0.10 % No
now the Yorkshire Sculpture 2 0.10 % No
the Yorkshire Sculpture Park 2 0.10 % No
for an education officer 2 0.10 % No
Botanical and Horticultural Society 2 0.10 % No
was appointed as the 2 0.10 % No
to produce a bid 2 0.10 % No
to restore the Gardens 2 0.10 % No

Internal links in - sbg.org.uk

Information
Information – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Opening Times
Opening Times – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
How To Find Us
How To Find Us – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Garden Etiquette
Garden Etiquette – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Florilegium
Florilegium – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Garden Contacts
Contacts for Sheffield Botanical Gardens – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Friends of Botanical Gardens
Friends of the Botanical Gardens (FOBS) – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Curator’s Restaurant & Tea Rooms
Curator’s House Restaurant and Tea Rooms – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Accessibility
Accessibility – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Information Point & the Dorothy Fox Education Centre
Information Point & the Dorothy Fox Education Centre – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Photography
Photography – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
The Gardens
Gardens – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
History
History 1 – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Plant Heritage
Plant Heritage – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Map Of The Gardens
Map Of The Gardens – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
What’s On
What’s On – Home – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Listings
Listings – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Music In The Gardens
Music In The Gardens – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Art in the Gardens
Art in the Gardens – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Open Air Theatre
Open Air Theatre – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Guided Tours
Guided Tours – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Weddings
Weddings – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Support Us
Support Us – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Donors
Donors – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Sheffield Botanical Gardens Trust
Sheffield Botanical Gardens Trust – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Patrons
Patrons – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Trustees
Trustees – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Sheffield Town Trust
Sheffield Town Trust – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
The Dorothy Fox Education Centre
The Dorothy Fox Education Centre – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Volunteering
Volunteers – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Donations and Legacies
Donations and Legacies – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Education
Education – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Out of School Activities For Children
Out of School Activities For Children – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Education Centre
Education Centre – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Contact
Contact Page – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
admin
admin – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
September Talks
September Talks – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Sponsor a Tree
Sponsor a Tree – Sheffield Botanical Gardens
Telephone Number for Information
Telephone Number for Information – Sheffield Botanical Gardens

Sbg.org.uk Spined HTML


History 1 – Sheffield Botanical Gardens HomeInformationOpening TimesHow To Find UsGarden EtiquetteFlorilegiumGarden ContactsFriends of Botanical GardensCurator’s Restaurant & Tea RoomsAccessibilityInformation Point & the Dorothy Fox Education CentrePhotographyThe GardensGardensHistoryPlant HeritageMap Of The GardensWhat’s OnListingsMusic In The GardensArt in the GardensOpen Air TheatreGuided ToursWeddingsSupport UsDonorsSheffield Botanical Gardens TrustPatronsTrusteesSheffield Town TrustThe Dorothy Fox Education CentreVolunteeringDonations and LegaciesEducationOut of School Activities For ChildrenEducation CentreContact History 1 admin 2018-03-25T17:18:28+00:00 History Please click on the links unelevated to discover the relevant historical information. A Rare Georgian Botanical Garden “Sheffield Botanical Gardens were fortunate to have some of the era’s leading experts involved in its megacosm including the polymath Joseph Paxton of Chatsworth fame and Robert Marnock who went on to wilt one of the leading landscape gardeners of the 19th century.” Thomas Dunn, the then Master Cutler, tabbed a public meeting in June 1833 pursuit a petition signed by 85 local residents concerned well-nigh the lack of public unshut spaces and facilities to promote both healthy recreation and self-education in Sheffield. It was resolved, at the meeting, to develop a Botanical Garden. By 1834 the Society had raised £7,500 through shares, and, having taken practical translating from Joseph Paxton of Chatsworth and Joseph Harrison of Wortley Hall, they purchased 18 acres of south facing farmland from the Wilson family, the snuff makers. The Society advertised a competition for laying out the grounds, the submitted plans were judged by experienced gardeners – Joseph Paxton (Chatsworth), Cooper (Wentworth), Walker (Banner Cross) and Wilson (Worksop Manor). Robert Marnock, gardener of Bretton Hall, Wakefield (now the Yorkshire Sculpture Park), was scheduled to diamond the Gardens and act as their first Curator. He laid out the Gardens in the then highly fashionable Gardenesque style, where each plant was displayed to perfection in scattered plantings. The runner-up in the competition, Benjamin Broomhead Taylor, was scheduled as the technie for the buildings. The Gardens were finally opened on the 29th and 30th June, and 4th and 5th July, 1836, when increasingly than 12,000 people visited. The Gardens were only unshut to the unstipulated public on well-nigh 4 Gala days per year; otherwise ticket was limited to shareholders and yearly subscribers. Financial Problems In 1844, financial problems led to the failure of the first society but the Gardens were rescued with the insemination of a second society (also known as the Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural Society) which purchased the land from the former society for £9,000. The conservatories were extended, a tea pavilion and the present Curator’s House were synthetic within the succeeding decade. A period of steady minutiae and growing international renown followed for the next 30 years. In 1897, falling income, competition from the new self-ruling municipality parks and residential minutiae in the zone meant that the Gardens were in danger again. The gardens were saved by the Sheffield Town Trust, dating when to 1297. In 1898 they paid £5,000 for the value of the shares, rhadamanthine owners and managers of the Gardens for the first half of the 20th Century. It was then that self-ruling ticket was introduced and continues today. Demolition of unsafe buildings was necessary and only the sunroom domes were repaired. The Gardens thrived until World War II, when wide-stretching forfeiture left the Sheffield Town Trust unable to sire the repairs and restoration required. 1950’s In 1951, the management of the Gardens passed to the Sheffield Corporation on a 99-year lease for a peppercorn rent of one shilling per year raised to 5p a quarter in 1971. The Town Trust remains the owners of the Gardens. With the aid of a grant from the WarForfeitureCommission, the Council was worldly-wise to instigate repairs to the domes, creating an Aviary and an Aquarium, and restoring Sheffield Botanical Gardens to their former glory. However, a downturn in the economy during the 1980s meant a severe reduction in funding and once then the Gardens were on their way to dereliction. 1984 to 1996 In 1984, the Friends of the Botanical Gardens, Sheffield (FOBS) was established as a group providing education for the public and supporting the Gardens. Practical volunteer work to help staff maintain the Gardens started in 1993. The Friends managed to trespassing the ripen in many parts of the Gardens but not the listed structures, plane the Paxton’s pavilions were derelict and in danger of collapse. In 1996 the Friends set up the Sheffield Botanical Gardens Trust with the aim of applying for grants to restore the Gardens. Restoration The Heritage Lottery Fund spoken its Urban Parks Programme in January 1996. Soon afterwards, an organisation known as the Sheffield Botanical Gardens Partnership was worked to produce a bid for the Gardens. Sheffield Council was not financially in a position to provide the required matched funding for a bid. SBGT and FOBS well-set that they would be responsible for raising the funds. An organisation known as the Sheffield Botanical Gardens Partnership was worked to produce a bid for the Gardens. Its membership was Sheffield Botanical Gardens Trust, Friends of the Botanical Gardens, Sheffield Town Trust, theMunicipalityCouncil and the Landscape Department of Sheffield University. The Gardens were awarded a grand of £5.06 million, which was to be matched by £1.22 million in funds and £0.41 million in work in kind. The project was designed to restore the Gardens, all the buildings and features to their 19th century condition whilst adapting to modern requirements. This included the full reinstatement of the Paxton’s pavilions to wilt a splendid home for frost sensitive plants from virtually the world. The restored Gardens were officially opened in June 2007 at a forfeit of approximately £6.69 million. Eight years of single-minded fundraising was required. At that time Sheffield Botanical Gardens was the only public unshut space in the country where the voluntary sector had raised increasingly than £1 million in matched funding. The incredible generosity of local and national charitable trusts, large and small, businesses, individuals, unvarying fundraising have restored the Gardens to their former magnificence. 2008 to 2014 Since the restoration the Gardens have received numerous awards and salutations including from The Civic Trust Awards, The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors, The Historical Gardens Foundation, The Landscape Institute, The Institute of Horticulture, RHS Yorkshire in Bloom Gold Medal 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010,UntriedFlag Awards from 2007 (TheUntriedFlag is the national benchmark for quality parks and untried spaces). TheMunicipalityof Sheffield won a gold medal from Entente Florale in 2005 in the large municipality category of the Europe wide competition. Sheffield Botanical Gardens played a significant part. As a Botanical Garden there are unchangingly enhancements to be made to the plant collections. In 2013 the Mediterranean Climate Garden was redesigned and replanted to a higher specification than the original restoration. There were enhancements to the Prairie Garden. Professors Nigel Dunnett and James Hitchmough from the Department of Landscape trialled this style of planting in Sheffield Botanical Gardens prior to their well-known “Fields of Gold” plantings in the London Olympic Park in 2012. The new Himalayan Garden was opened in June 2014. The plants were derived from seeds placid by Chris Chadwell, a modern day plant collector, particularly from plants growing between 9,000 and 14,000 feet. One of the Friends with a passion for Himalayan plants has been share sponsoring Chris’s collecting trips and for the past 6 years growing a hodgepodge for the area. Present and Future The restored Gardens vamp thousands of visitors annually. They are now established as the outdoor cultural venue for Sheffield. The Theatre, Art and Music in the Gardens events vamp a remoter 30,000 visitors over the season. The Friends have a long established schedule of horticulture and botanical lectures and workshops. A number of plant fairs and specialist plant society displays are hosted eg Hardy Plant, cactus, rose and orchids. The Gardens have a popular thriving Florilegium Society. In 2018 our focus is on education. Over the past several years funds have been piled for a new education centre. There are approximately 125,000 pre and schoolchildren in our zone and 500,000 in the natural catchment zone of Sheffield Botanical Gardens. The new towers completed and opened in March 2017 has 3 classroom areas, a library and an office for an education officer. The centre has been totally paid for by generous legacies and donations and fundraising. It is hoped to be worldly-wise to find funding for an education officer.Remoterplans for plant types not currently represented will be next. Alpine and tropical houses will be our next projects dependent upon successful fundraising. Gardenesque Style The gardenesque style of garden diamond evolved during the 1820s from Humphrey Repton’s picturesque style. The term gardenesque was introduced by John Claudius Louden (1783-1843) in 1832. The main foible of this style is that all the trees, shrubs and plants are positioned and managed in such a way that each plant can be displayed to its full potential in scattered planting. The tideway involved the megacosm of small scale landscapes to promote beauty, variety and mystery. This contrasts with other botanical collections with similar plants grouped together. Many of the features, which distinguished this diamond style such as winding paths, dotted island beds, expanses of grass, and tree-planted mounds, can still be seen. It was Robert Marnock, their designer and first curator, who perfected the style when he laid them out in 1836. Sheffield Botanical Gardens were undisputed at the time as stuff the weightier of their kind in Britain. They are still one of the weightier gardenesque landscapes in Britain. Robert Marnock Robert Marnock was one of the outstanding horticulturalists and garden designers of the 19th century and was considered by his contemporaries to be the weightier exponent of the gardenesque school of landscape gardening. Before he came to Sheffield, Marnock worked as the throne gardener in Bretton Hall (now the Yorkshire Sculpture Park), Wakefield. He was scheduled by the Sheffield Botanical and Horticultural Society in 1834 to diamond and lay out the Botanical Gardens, at an yearly salary of £100. Marnock designed the Botanical Gardens in the then highly fashionable gardenesque style. He became the first Curator of the Gardens in 1836. He moreover make-believe as a landscape consultant for the SheffieldUnstipulatedCemetery, wideness the valley from Sheffield Botanical Gardens, which opened in 1836. It’s considered a nationally outstanding example of a Victorian cemetery. In 1840, Marnock moved on to lay out the Gardens of the Royal Botanic Society of London in Regent’s Park and was scheduled as the Gardens’ Curator. His visit was on the translating of John Claudius Loudon. “Mr Marnock has sensibly an spanking-new taste in landscape gardening, and may be regarded, in this point of view, as a valuable vanquishment to the part of the country in which he is situated”. He remained curator until 1863 but unfurled to practise as a landscape gardener until 1879. He returned to Sheffield for 2 commissions, Thornbury in 1865 and Weston Park in 1873. Thornbury was a mansion for the cutlery and steel magnate Frederick Mappin. It is now a private hospital. Weston Park was the first municipal park in Sheffield and ripened from the grounds of Weston Hall which was converted into SheffieldMunicipalityMuseum. News September Talks Sponsor a Tree Telephone Number for Information Join Our Flickr Group Copyright 2014 | All Rights Reserved | Designed by Grapefuit Creative | Crocodile Web Group FlickrEmail