September, 1922 
73 
The lower level of Mr. H. Fletcher’s 
garden is tucked into an angle formed 
by the pergola and the garage; the 
latter becoming an integral and un~ 
usually attractive part of the garden 
picture 
A GARDEN SCHEME 
ON TWO LEVELS 
AT WILMINGTON 
DELAWARE 
Perrett 
The vine-covered pergola separates two levels and is 
itself a place from which both sections of the garden may 
be enjoyed in turn. Charles Wellford Leavitt was the 
landscape architect and James Barton Keen was the 
architect of the house and the architectural elements of 
the garden 
The second terrace lies above the third section on the 
opposite flank of the pergola and is formally planted with 
well-placed evergreens in upright shapes. In the center 
prostrate junipers are used effectively to soften the lines 
of the pool coping. Evergreen vines cover the walls 
