_ 436 THE 
GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 
LE. [JuLy 9, 
55007 a year should have been t 
the plantations alone. The inco 
from forest produce. en 
a of those who prepared the side, it could 
have been effected with greater dexterity. 
actuall 
of having gained 7000 
much worse, for the meg of Dea 
erals, Was only 58891, 
loss о 
0007. 
187Z instead of 2500/.! In1849-50the 
Forest amounted to 536/.; in 1850-51, de was a 
gain of 437) In the same two years High-meadow 
could only make 9297. and 1406/., or 2335/. instead of 
At this time the late Board of Commissioners 
"was dissolved ; in 1851 and 1852, Dean produced 
43697. net, and High-meadow 2099/.; in 1852-53 th 
estimated net income of the former is returned as 
21,0007, and of k 
sums being exclus 
Such being the 2k te of things, 
the official Кеин жр 
uzzle a plai n to kno 
pret Parliame ntary repor m^ to 
impe ce e the t a ^ Tulicions, mer “creditable,” 
dable,” o forth, are the last that 
oild" be voie. lo management přoductive of 
ur es lts as we have descri 
dern from 
ainly does 
vidt High viidi w Woods were, in 
1849, "ud still are under the p ement of Mr. 
rins АН, 
He 
was 
appointed deput suyo in 1 being then 
po оз man 4 r having “had anything 
imber." His father was deputy- 
him He received his appointment 
ms the Surveyor-General of tet ds, 1808. 
His salary is a year; he a house value 
1007. a 8 of cleared tind: value 37, 370. 10s; 
and, value 
h 
surveyor before 
s . 12s., an w 
1842 a appointed, by X £o letter, depnty-gaveller 
in the forest, with 1007. a year additio 
In this forest the deputy surveyor i is raided by de 
assistan Mr. J AM 
Lord Dówois's committee that he had bibet 
been Mr. Husxtsson’s gardener; in 1828 he was 
appointed by Mr. SruneEs Bourne, then chief com- 
ioner; with a salary of 150/. a year, and 85. a 
He was moreov: i 0 
baise bd which produced him 277. a year, paid by 
as the 
the railway быр: His charge was the practical 
work of the . The other is Mr. WirLtAM 
d by the Commissioner of Woods 
in 1844, with a yr ae of 1007. a year. a house 
and allowances valued at 407. 165.; he hasalso 971.63. | 
a Mor pre carica of Forest. ilways. We find 
Е: 
FE тар 
bted to our able contemporary the 
DDITIONA 
We inde 
Builder f for the е еи information EAE 4T 
ER ss sies 
CTED A D ch he sug- 
gosts might be ad means are 
ly taken 1 ы, to 22 0 po ad Heath 
—— the hands of Mammon. Let us quote his үө : 
— * revenue from né the erection of three 
Dea dge 
h 
mm 
e 4 
е 
UNCAN's state- |y 
* London 
from these what would be te ffs et of a gran 
e Lord 
now beat 
ra increase, be 4 Aet 
н ane for sore as кы аз 
ur Statesmen 
for the aem. | 
С 
orests ought deeply to fed лы a ч. E pro- 
E 
| 
MICA CREEN 
airos) So 
NP 
REFERENCE TO PLAN.* 
errace, or Spanich Road. 
KK. Sir T. Wilson's Estate. 
e ^ | bina joe. — 1 — 8 locality. From tia 
the Royal Terrace across 
by t 
2. Bk is "Heath, Р ppresiated ‘alike 
of | mecha anie, a 
is e 
|t 
rs of Woods and | to t 
| | remarkable suburb is pene to our ee if dh let 
ani 
ues to the well-known Fi fom 
4 love ely view of Harro and the 
— by the i 
conti 
joyed a 
e thi 
„which, as its па 
| the country, and again — to us a MM and 
ing panorama, Here rrive at a portion. 
the emm desired to be appropriated и for эш йш, byt 
which this a project would веси 
of the Heath: m mute. this 
гешн! s the upper terrace. 
would, in all, be 
u thee extent of open gro about 
e taken n it for gran ted that this 
We hav 
| 30 
— 
in; “ond Tot ай, 
ing, once for а 
this unrivalled 
stead, and we — oe at a an, by Professor | t 
LL resen 
: СоскЕВЕ RELL, which eaders, 
Spot con for for 8 park there гзтай to М poses with 
= Primrose Hill and the Regent's Park by a ard 
indeed, i 
cities of the а ‘for a "pata suburb. Its 
less than чөй m. cutem өре 
vast m 
ig denm and variety, and Proverbial ы 
sandy soil, of vast id. elima 
to 
pene en bebes lines of i 
ome Lin ei ale aere силе ve: 
nient. 
ut EE Fontainebleau i is to 
extent to whic its s picturesque be un 
the wildness of the Heath are enjoyed by 
resh 
seen this ad 
alit 
surrounding buildings. One of the e most extensive an 
iful views = the south-west has been blocked out 
UL road 
ize estates, now 
mproving 
ing Scenery prese 
desired to be built over, — which, if so appropriated, 
We have to express. our obligation to the Editor of the 
d | Buiter aa mons ake with which he allowed us to avail 
e accom wood illu 
| Prof, Сосенка а vies. > g excellent eut, illustrati ing 
actually laid out | mere 
m- — building, and phrtly let, and which at this time next 
1 
have ob 1 
= 
Mas oa its w 
m dr 
fros y soi 
oil, its freedom r e p 7 
of autumn, and the later T mo 1 
ok spring, to say nothing o а ча" „я 
А the fal London E ‘whi te 
tat of places lyin, 
north, or in the smoke-begrimed p plains 
