Garden of 10 and 11 Downing Street

The garden of 10 and 11 Downing Street is an L-shaped garden 0.5 acres in size behind the official residences of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and the Chancellor of the Exchequer, 10 and 11 Downing Street in the Whitehall district of the City of Westminster in central London. The garden has been gradually developed over the 20th century under successive Prime Ministers.

The path edge of the garden at Downing Street.

History

The terrace and garden have provided a casual setting for many gatherings of First Lords with foreign dignitaries, Cabinet ministers, guests, and staff. Prime Minister Tony Blair, for example, hosted a farewell reception in 2007 for his staff on the terrace. John Major announced his 1995 resignation as leader of the Conservative Party in the garden.[1] Churchill called his secretaries the "garden girls" because their offices overlook the garden. It was also the location of the first press conference announcing the Coalition Government between David Cameron's Conservatives and Nick Clegg's Liberal Democrats.[2] In September 1941 Winston and Clementine Churchill drank champagne in the garden with five 'young Frenchmen' who had escaped from France in a canoe before arriving in Eastbourne after having spent 30 hours in the English Channel.[3] Blair held a press conference with Bill Clinton in the garden. Press conferences at the White House are frequently held at the White House Rose Garden. It is believed that the similarity of the occasion has given rise to the 'rose garden' nickname which Victoria Summerley, writing in Great Gardens of London feels is "inaccurate".[1]

In 2012 Michael Craig Martin loaned his 2011 sculpture of a large red lightbulb, Bulb, for installation in the garden.[4] Barbara Hepworth's 1968 sculpture Hollow Form with Inner Form is situated in the garden, on loan from the Government Art Collection.[1][5][6]

The view of the garden from the balcony

In October 1929 The Times reported on the retirement after 40 years of Downing Street's head gardener, Harry Simpson. Having originally started as a gardener in St James Park, he had worked in Downing Street under every Prime Minister from William Gladstone to Ramsay Macdonald.[7] The main gardener at Downing Street, Paul Schooling, was awarded the British Empire Medal in the 2010s for his 31 years service to the Royal Parks and his work at Downing Street over 26 years during the premierships of five Prime Ministers.[8]

In a 1937 article for The Countryman, Neville Chamberlain related that he once spotted a rare leopard moth in the garden, and put a nesting box in the trees, which was later inhabited by a pair of blue tits. Chamberlain was dismayed to find that one of the blue tits's three eggs had later disappeared.[9]

An item in The Times diary in 1989 reported that Margaret Thatcher had believed she had heard a nightingale in the garden. The Sun journalist David Kemp recorded the bird who was then identified as a song thrush by the RSPB.[10]

The garden cost The Royal Parks £29,137 in half-yearly maintenance in the six months after the 2010 general election.[11]

The garden has been used for numerous events honouring various public bodies. A party to mark the 100th anniversary of the Brownies in 2014. Cameron and Barack Obama held a barbecue for military personnel in the garden in 2011.[1]

A special edition of the BBC Radio 4 programme Gardeners' Question Time was broadcast from Downing Street in December 2016 and featured an interview with the head gardener of the 10 Downing Street garden.[12]

The garden has been opened to the public on six occasions as part of the Open Garden Squares Weekend organised by the London Parks & Gardens Trust.[13]

A view of the rear of 10 and 11 Downing Street from the garden

Design

Roy Strong described the garden as "one of London's hidden gems". Victoria Summerley, writing in Great Gardens of London felt that the garden "would not win any medals for garden design" and that the design of the garden was "not an exercise in metropolitan chic or horticultral bling" but instead reflected the features of an "archetypal British back garden" including roses, a shaded area, a large lawn and raised vegetable beds.[1] Summerley observed the evolution of the garden's design, noting that in 1964 it featured only a "very straightforward boring layout of lawn" with a "meagre border around the edge" as evidenced in a photograph of Harold Wilson's cabinet taken in the garden.[1] The shape of the garden has remained unchanged since its creation. The garden's simple design of largely lawn with mature trees, rose beds and flowering shrubs remained unchanged for several years.[13]

The garden behind originally backed on to St James's Park, as evidenced in George Lambert's 1736-1740 painting of the garden in the collection of the Museum of London. The painting depicts two "gentlemen in wigs", one of whom is believed to be Robert Walpole.[1] Lambert's painting depicts rectilinear borders and a "formal grass parterre with small, box-edged beds filled with topiary, flowering plants and dwarf fruit trees".[14] In 1736, in the first reference to the garden, it was written that "a piece of garden ground...hath been lately made and fitted up at the Charge...of the Crown" with "a piece of garden ground scituate in his Majestys park of St. James's, & belonging & adjoining to the house now inhabited by the Right Honourable the Chancellour of his Majestys Exchequer".[13]

Tubs of flowers line the steps from the terrace; around the walls are rose beds with flowering and evergreen shrubs.[15][16] (See North elevation of Number 10 with steps leading to the garden[17])[18] The terrace features lead planters inscribed with '1666' and 'CR' (an abbreviation of 'Carolus Rex').[1]

The bird table in the garden was donated by the BBC children's television programme Blue Peter, an addition to the garden that Strong felt was "more appropriate for a between-the-wars semi" and "wrong for a Georgian townhouse".[1] The pond was built by the Wildlife Trust in 2000.[1]

The third shell launched in the Provisional Irish Republican Army's mortar attack on Downing Street exploded in the garden, leaving a 1 meter crater. A woodland garden was created around the crater with cherry trees and daphne odora.[1]

The rose beds were commissioned by Margaret Thatcher. They were planted with David Austin roses including a rose named for Thatcher herself.[1]

A play area for the Cameron's children with a climbing frame and slide was built in the garden during David Cameron's premiership. Roy Strong described the addition of the play area as "ghastly".[1]

Since the advent of the 21st century the design of garden has reflected environmental concerns and features introduced have included a rose walk, box shaped beds and borders and curved paths.[13] These features were introduced under the premiership of Tony Blair.[19]

Gordon and Sarah Jane Brown installed a vegetable patch in the garden in 2009 after being prompted by Michelle Obama, who had initiated the White House Vegetable Garden. Obama had visited the Downing Street garden in April 2009 and told Sarah Jane Brown that "You know about the White House vegetable garden and you can do one here". Produce from the garden was served in the Downing Street staff canteen. The garden contained "strawberries, tomatoes, beetroot, parsnips, peppers, chard and courgettes" at the time of its public unveiling. The Browns were assisted by their children in planting the garden. Boxes and plants to attract bees and ladybirds were due to be installed at a later date.[20] Writing in The Daily Telegraph, Tim Walker noted that Sarah Brown's vegetable garden had become "woefully neglected" by July 2010 and was told that David and Samantha Cameron "had been too pre-occupied to think much about it — he with sorting out the economic mess that Gordon Brown had left him, and she with her pregnancy".[11]

Water for the garden is provided by an underground tank that reuses rainwater, installed in 2009.[13]

gollark: But... but why?
gollark: :gun1:
gollark: It annoys me that it's been changed to water pistol basically everywhere.
gollark: Yes, you're right.
gollark: So I assume so.

References

  1. Victoria Summerley (1 October 2015). Great Gardens of London. Frances Lincoln. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-78101-200-0.
  2. "Welcome to the Dave and Nick Show". BBC News. 12 May 2010.
  3. "Young Frenchmen at Downing Street". The Times (49038). 23 September 1941. p. 7. Retrieved 29 May 2020 via The Times Digital Archive.
  4. "Government Art Collection Annual Report 2011-2012" (PDF). Government Art Collection. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  5. "A Working Collection". Government Art Collection. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  6. "Hollow Form with Inner Form". Government Art Collection. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  7. "News In Brief". The Times. 2 October 1929. p. 11. Retrieved 29 May 2020 via The Times Digital Archive.
  8. "Keeping the roses sweet for five Prime Ministers". The Royal Parks. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  9. "Prime Minister's Garden". The Times. 9 September 1937. p. 14 via The Times Digital Archive.
  10. Gunn, Shelia (3 February 1989). "Times Diary". The Times. p. 16. Retrieved 29 May 2020 via The Times Digital Archive.
  11. Tim Walker (13 January 2011). "David Cameron spends thousands of pounds a month on Downing Street garden". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  12. Debora Robertson (21 December 2016). "Behind the scenes of Gardeners' Question Time, in No 10's back garden". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  13. "No.10 Downing Street Garden". London Gardens Online - No.10 Downing Street Garden. London Parks & Gardens Trust. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  14. Samuel Thomas Parker; John Wilson Betlyon (2006). The Roman Frontier in Central Jordan: Final Report on the Limes Arabicus Project, 1980-1989. Dumbarton Oaks. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-88402-298-5.
  15. Jones, p. 180.
  16. Seldon, p. 46.
  17. figure0748-117-a, british-history.ac.uk
  18. British History Online, From: 'Plate 117: No. 10, Downing Street: elevation and general view', Survey of London: volume 14: St Margaret, Westminster, part III: Whitehall II (1931), pp. 117. Date accessed: 21 July 2008.
  19. White, Michael (2013-02-26). "Downing Street garden reveals its secrets". the Guardian. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  20. "Browns show off Downing St veg patch". The Daily Telegraph. 24 July 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2020.

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