326 A HISTORY OF GARDENING IN ENGLAND 
Lime 
trees. 
Wall 
Fruit. 
Quince 
trees. 
[Fruit 
trees. ] 
Special 
Wall 
Fruit. 
side thereof, and severed from it with a brick wall of ten foot 
high, and also severed from Wymbledon Park with a brick wall 
ten foot high upon the east side thereof, and severed from the 
highway or lane leading from Wymbledon town to the Iron Plate 
Mills with a brick wall of nine foot high upon the South side 
thereof, and from the Kitchen garden with another wall of bricks 
of ten foot high on the West side thereof, containing upon 
admeasurement ten acres, one rood, twenty-three perches ; worth 
per annum £10. 5s. 
Memorandum, that the said Vineyard Garden is divided into 
twelve several triangles, inclosed within four fair walks or allies, 
twenty three foot broad, lying round the said garden, two whereof 
are gravelled walks, and the other two grass plots. Eight of the 
foresaid twelve triangles make in themselves one square, in the 
middle whereof, is one fair round or circle of gravelled earth, in 
the centre whereof stands one Lime tree, having eight several 
walks or allies, 23 foot broad, running across and angular ways, 
answerable to the foresaid eight triangles ; the insides of which 
eight walks or allies are planted with Lime trees, and other young 
and well planted trees and borders of Currant trees and Respass 1 
trees. The other four triangles, having angular and cross walks 
within them, though not so fully completed as the other eight 
triangles, make one square, and, being reduced to a regular form 
with the other eight triangles, make a very complete garden plot. 
Within which said twelve several triangles there are growing 
five hundred and seven fruit trees of divers sorts and kinds of 
fruits, pleasant and profitable, which we value, one tree with 
another, in the whole at £83. 11s. 
There are also one hundred forty four Lime trees, very well 
planted and ordered, which, growing in a regular form in the 
insides of the said triangles, are a great grace and special ornament 
to the whole garden ; which Lime trees we value, one tree with 
another, in the whole at £28. 16s. 
The insides of three of the outward walks or allies are of 
latticed rails, upon which lattices there are growing one hundred 
and six trees of divers kinds of wall fruit, which one with another 
we value to be worth £10. 12s. 
In the inside of the fourth outward walk or alley are sixteen 
quince trees, well planted and ordered, worth £2. 13s. 
And also upon the out borders there are growing thirty eight 
fruit trees of pears and cherries, worth £3. 16s. 
There are growing upon three of the walls of the said Vineyard 
Garden two hundred fifty and four trees, of divers special sorts 
and kinds of wall fruits, as apricots, pears, pear plums, may 
1 = Raspberry. 
