358 A HISTORY OF GARDEXIXG IX EXGLAXD. 



1773 Andrew Coltee Ducarel, ll.b. and ll.d. A Letter to 



^^'m. Watson, m.d., upon the early Cultivation of 

 Botany in England ; and some particulars about John 

 Tradescant, Gardener to King Charles I. London^ 

 1773. 4to. 



1774 John Coakley Lettsom. Hortus Uptoneniis. A Catalogue 



of Dr. Fothergill's garden at Upton at the time of 

 his decease. (No date) c. 1774. 8vo. 



Grovehill, a rural and horticultural sketch. 1784. 4to. 



A translation of Abbe de Commerell's account of the 



culture of the Mangel Wurzel or Root of Scarcity. 

 London, 1788. 



1775 Linnaeus — Jenkinson. A Generic and Specific Description 



of British Plants ; translated from the Genera et 

 Species Plantarum, of Linnaeus; with Notes and 

 Observations, by James Jenkinson. Kendal, 1775. 8vo. 



Rev. Samuel Ward. A Modern System of Natural His- 

 tory, containing accurate descriptions and faithful 

 histories of animals, vegetables, and minerals. Lon- 

 don, ^']']y]'j- 1-2 vols. i2m.o. '^ 



An Essay on the different natural Situations of Gardens. 



London, 1775. 4to. * 



1776 Henry Home, Lord Kames. The Gentleman Farmer. 



Edinburgh, 1776. 8vo. 



Several later editions — the sixth in 1815. 



William Withering, m.d., f.r.s., f.l.s. A Botanical 

 Arrangement of all the Vegetables naturally growing 

 in Great Britain, with an easy Introduction to the 

 Study of Botany. (Plates.) Birm. 1776. 2 vols. 

 8vo. 



2nd edition. London, 1778-90. 3 vols. * 



■ 3rd edition. 1796. 4 vols. * 



1777 James Anderson, ll.d. Thoughts on Planting (first ap- 



peared in the Edinburgh Weekly Magazine), by Agri- 

 cola. Edin. 1777. 8vo. * 



A Description of a Patent Hot-house, &c. London. 



1804. T2mo. 



