Farmington -- Hill-Stead Museum Sunken Garden
Object Details
- General
- The Sunken Garden is located adjacent to the 1901 Colonial Revival mansion, Hill-Stead, designed by Theodate Pope (later Riddle), with plans prepared by the architectural firm McKim, Mead, and White, to showcase the Pope family's important collection of French Impressionist paintings. Integral to the original plan of the country house was its landscape, designed to embrace not only a working New England farm, but also rustic woodland walking gardens and the formal Sunken Garden. Laid out in a natural depression with its asymmetrical boundaries defined by eight-to-ten-foot high drystone walls, the Sunken Garden consists of a summer house surrounded by brick paths and geometric flower beds that are enclosed by a hedge, forming an elongated octagon with grass filling the space between the hedge and outer stone wall. The garden is planted with 75 varieties of primarily perennials as well as small flowering trees and evergreens. At the far end is a stone sundial designed by Theodate Pope Riddle. The Sunken Garden was grassed over in the 1940s wartime labor shortage, leaving only the summer house in place. Today's reconstruction, initiated in 1983 by the Connecticut Valley Garden Club and the Garden Club of Hartford, is based on a planting plan by the landscape designer Beatrix Farrand for the "garden of Mrs. J. W. Riddle, Farmington, Conn.," discovered in the former's archives at the University of California, Berkeley. The Farrand design, dating from 1916, with its careful choice of texture, foliage, and color combinations of perennials (limited here to a palette of blues, pinks, whites, pale purple, and greys) echoes the theories of Gertrude Jekyll, the English garden designer whose work Farrand admired. Persons and organizations associated with the garden include: Alfred Atmore Pope (former owner, 1901-1913); Ada Brooks Pope (former owner, 1913-1920); Theodate Pope Riddle (former owner, 1920-1946); the Hill-Stead Museum (owner, 1946 to date); Beatrix Farrand (landscape designer, 1916); and Roland/Towers (landscape restorers, 1986).
- Former owner
- Pope, Alfred Atmore, 1844-1913
- Pope, Ada Brooks
- Riddle, Theodate Pope, 1867-1946
- Landscape designer
- Farrand, Beatrix, 1872-1959
- Owner
- Hill-Stead Museum
- Landscape restorer
- Roland/Towers
- Collection Photographer
- Jeruss, Irene
- Place
- Hill-Stead Museum Sunken Garden (Farmington, Connecticut)
- United States of America -- Connecticut -- Hartford County -- Farmington
- Topic
- Gardens -- Connecticut -- Farmington
- Garden walks
- Lawns
- Boxwood
- Parterres
- Formal gardens
- Garden houses
- Houses
- Rhododendrons
- Fuelwood
- Flower beds
- Garden borders
- Hedges
- Flowering shrubs
- Edging
- Flowering trees
- Daffodils
- Narcissus bulbs
- Trellises
- Fences
- Maple
- Tents
- Women gardeners
- Driveways
- Rills
- Lilacs
- Former owner
- Pope, Alfred Atmore, 1844-1913
- Pope, Ada Brooks
- Riddle, Theodate Pope, 1867-1946
- Landscape designer
- Farrand, Beatrix, 1872-1959
- Owner
- Hill-Stead Museum
- Landscape restorer
- Roland/Towers
- See more items in
- Irene Jeruss garden photography collection
- Irene Jeruss garden photography collection / Garden Images / Connecticut
- Extent
- 26 Slides (photographs)
- Date
- 1999-2004
- Container
- Box 1
- Archival Repository
- Archives of American Gardens
- Identifier
- AAG.JER, File CT206_JER
- Type
- Archival materials
- Slides
- Slides (photographs)
- Collection Citation
- Smithsonian Institution, Archives of American Gardens, Irene Jeruss Garden Photography Collection
- Collection Rights
- Archives of American Gardens encourages the use of its archival materials for non-commercial, educational and personal use under the fair use provision of U.S. copyright law. Use or copyright restrictions may exist. It is incumbent upon the researcher to ascertain copyright status and assume responsibility for usage. All requests for duplication and use must be submitted in writing and approved by Archives of American Gardens. Please direct reference inquiries to the Archives of American Gardens: aag@si.edu.
- Bibliography
- Garden has been featured in Paula Dietz, "The Sunken Garden at Hill-Stead," The Hartford Monthly, May 1989, p. 54.Garden has been featured in Anne Stillman, "The Garden at Hill-Stead," Connecticut Preservation News, September/October 1995, p. 12.Garden has been featured in Kathleen McCormick, "The Hidden Jewel," Historic Preservation, October 1995, p. 80.Garden has been featured in Rea Lubar Duncan, "Sunken Treasures," Connecticut Magazine, August 1998, pp. 116-121.Garden has been featured in James F. O'Gorman, Edward S. Cooke, Jr., and Allyson M. Hayward, Hill-Stead: The Country Place of Theodate Pope Riddle (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2010).
- Collection Restrictions
- Access to collection by appointment only. Researcher must submit request for appointment in writing. Certain items may be restricted and not available to researchers. Please direct reference inquiries to the Archives of American Gardens: aag@si.edu.
- Record ID
- ebl-1654277100508-1654277101066-0
- Metadata Usage
- CC0
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