The Garden Magazine, April, 1924 
115 
Charles Darling , Photo. 
WHERE MAN AND NATURE MEET IN SYMPATHETIC COMPACT 
“Plants may be insignificant as specimens yet, when massed, take on distinct character— 
wild Roses are a case in point.” In this all-native planting the wild Rose, Red Cedar, 
Blueberry, Bayberry, and Ferns unite in a harmonious and yet sufficiently diversified 
whole—a happy illustration of how the natural beauty of moorland may be turned to sophis¬ 
ticated uses. Mr. William E. Atwood’s summer home, “The Gallery-on-the-Moors,” at East 
Gloucester; Ralph Adams Cram, Architect; Mary P. Cunningham, Landscape Architect 
