
          358

Hill, John (cont.)

The gardener’s new kalendar, divided according to the
twelve months of the year, and under each month into the
separate weeks ... Containing the whole practice of gardening, 
under the four general heads, 1. The pleasure
garden, 2. The kitchen ground, 3. The seminary, 4. The
fruit garden and orchard. London, T. Osborne [etc.]
1758. 428 p. (Dept. Agr.; Brit. Mus.; Roy. Hort.
Soc.)
The attribution of Johnson (p.214 to William
Hanbury has been followed by various bibliographers. 
Johnson, however (p.209), also enters this
under Hill, without a date, but among works published 
in 1758 or 1759. Dryander, in Cat. Bib.
Banks, 3:612, enters under Hill, and Brit. Mus.,
which doubtless has the very copy originally belonging 
to Banks, enters under title, crediting
it to Sir J. Hill. Haller also, 2:357, gives it
under Hill. The "Kalendar" is actually very similar 
to Hill’s "Eden" (1757), without the illustrations 
and long descriptions of ornamentals,
and with the other material rearranged and possibly 
augmented in the "Kalendar", but they
are unquestionably by the same author. (MFW)

An idea of a botanical garden in England. London,
Printed for R. Baldwin, 1758. 16 p. (Dept. Agr.)

A method of producing double flowers from single, by
a regular course of culture. London, 1758. 40 p.
(Brit. Mus.; Brit Mus., Nat. Hist.)

----- 2d ed. London, 1759. 40 p. (Brit. Mus.)

---- [German] Die art und weise durch eine regelmässige 
ordnung der cultur Oder wartung, gefüllte blumen aus
einfachen zu ziehen. Nürnberg, Im verlag bey J. M. Seligmanns 
seel. erben, 1766. 48 p. (Mo. Bot. Gard.)
Reviewed in Göttingische Gel. Anz. 1766(2):
1011-1013.

A new method of propagating fruit-trees and flowering
shrubs. London, 1758. See Barnes, Thomas.
        