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THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 



Bromehoiise garden between Chesterfield and Dronfield on 

 gritstone, cultivated by Miss Bromehead an investigator and 

 collector of plants. 



Cavid. bij Gough. The greater number of the places of growth 

 of plants supplied by Mr. E. Forster jun. Turn, and Dilkv. i. 332. 

 When will our antiquaries get rid of their passion for folios and 

 quartos, and print in portable volumes which may accompany a 

 traveller. If reprinted in fol. the editor will do well to consider the 

 convenience of the reader who consults the index, by following 

 Gibson in paging the columns. 



Cha])el Allerton garden near Leeds, cultivated by E. Salisbury, 

 probably removed to near London. [Salisbury did, no doubt, 

 remove many plants to Mill Hill, tlie garden made by Peter 

 Collinson which he occupied from 1802 till his removal to Queen 

 Street, Edgware Eoad, about 1809. At this last residence he 

 could only cultivate some hundreds of pot plants.] 



Clapham garden cultivated by Mr Bewick, I think a merchant 

 of London. 



Clifton garden near Bristol hot wells, on redland limestone, 

 cultivated by Lady de Clifford. 



Codnor garden near Alfreton in Derbyshire, on gritstone, 

 cultivated by the late Miss Wood, a most zealous cultivator 

 of hardy plants, the whole surface of whose garden was coverd 

 with curious plants contiguous as in a state of nature and 

 struggling for preeminence or life. Her art of gardening 

 consisted in extirpating weeds and preventing one plant from 

 destroying its neighbours. 



Crome garden near Upton in Worcestershire on blue lias, 

 cultivated by G. W. Coventry Earl of Coventry and his gardener 

 Graeffer afterwards partner with Gordon of Mile end nursery 

 and at length gardener to the King of Naples. 



[Curtis. See Lambeth garden.] 



Darleij garden on gritstone in the valley of the Darwent 

 between Bakewell and Matlock in Derbyshire. The collection 

 was formed by T. Knowlton the celebrated gardener of the last 

 century and cultivated by him and his grandson the present 

 owner at Lonsborough in the E. riding of Yorkshire, whence 

 it was removed to Edensor in Derbyshire and finally to Darley 

 [p. 91]. [Thomas Knowlton senior (1692-1782) had been 

 gardener to Sherard. Thomas Knowlton junior (1757-1837) 

 was elected F.L.S. 1795. The latter had a herbarium (p. 110).] 



Dav. Daviess welsh botanology, 1813. 8vo. The first part is 

 a flora of Anglesey and the second in Welsh an alphabetic list 

 of the Welsh names of vegetables. The author was rector of Aber in 

 Caernarvonshire but resided at Beaumaris in Anglesey, where I 

 botanised with him for 3 or 4 weeks, looking through his her- 

 barium. He gave me duplicates of the rarer phenogamous plants. 

 I hope his heirs have attended to my exhortations to keep it in a 

 room where there is a constant fire, for Anglesey is a flat island 

 overrun with Iris Pseudacorus. The plants were very much 

 eaten by the brown Dermestes though kept in a closet adjoining 



