Victoria Medal of Honour

The Victoria Medal of Honour (VMH) is awarded to British horticulturists resident in the United Kingdom whom the Royal Horticultural Society Council considers deserving of special honour by the Society.[1]

The award was established in 1897 "in perpetual remembrance of Her Majesty's glorious reign, and to enable the Council to confer honour on British horticulturists." The Society's rules state that only sixty-three horticulturists can hold the VMH at any given time, in commemoration of the sixty-three years of Queen Victoria's reign. Therefore, the honour is not awarded every year, but may be made to multiple recipients in other years.

Awards

1897 – The first 60 medallists

The first 60 medals were awarded on 26 October 1897:[2]

  • John Gilbert Baker (1834–1920)
  • Isaac Bayley Balfour (1853–1922)
  • Peter Barr (1826–1909)
  • Archibald F Barron (1835–1903)
  • Edward John Beale (1835–1902)
  • William Boxall (1844–1910)
  • William Bull (1828–1902)
  • George Bunyard (1841–1919)
  • Frederick William Burbidge (1847–1905)
  • William Crump (1843–1932)
  • Richard Dean (1830–1905)
  • George A Dickson (c1835 – 1909)
  • Henry Honeywood D'ombrain (1818–1905)
  • Charles Thomas Druery (1843–1917)
  • Malcolm Dunn (1837–1899)
  • Henry Nicholson Ellacombe (1822–1916)
  • Henry John Elwes (1846–1922)
  • Michael Foster (1836–1907)
  • John Fraser (1821–1900)
  • George Gordon (1841–1914)
  • John Heal (c1841 – 1925)
  • George Henslow (1835–1925)
  • Hermann Carl Gottlieb Herbst (c1830 – 1904)
  • Samuel Reynolds Hole (1819–1904)
  • Joseph Dalton Hooker (1817–1911)
  • Francis Daltry Horner (c1838 – 1912)
  • James Hudson (1846–1932)
  • Gertrude Jekyll (1843–1932)
  • Peter Edmund Kay (1853 – 1909)
  • John Laing (1823–1900)
  • James McIndoe (1836–1910)
  • Charles Maries (1851–1902)
  • Henry Ernest Milner (1845–1906)
  • Edwin Molyneux (1851–1921)
  • George Monro (c1847 – 1920)
  • Fredrick William Moore (1857–1949)
  • Daniel Morris (1844–1933)
  • George Nicholson (1847–1908)
  • James O'Brien (1842–1930)
  • Paul George (1841–1921)
  • William Paul (1822–1905)
  • T Francis Rivers (1831–1899)
  • Lionel Walter Rothschild (1868–1937)
  • Frederick Sander (1847–1920)
  • Henry Schröder (1824–1910)
  • John Seden (1840–1921)
  • Nathaniel Newman Sherwood (1846–1916)
  • James Smith (1837–1903)
  • Martin Ridley Smith ( – 1908)
  • Walter Speed (c1835 – 1921) Head Gardener at Penrhyn Castle, Wales[3]
  • Arthur Warwick Sutton (1854–1925)
  • Owen Thomas (1843–1923)
  • William Thompson (1823–1903)
  • David Thomson (1823–1909)
  • Harry Turner (c1848 – 1906)
  • Ellen Willmott (1858–1934)
  • George Fergusson Wilson (1822–1902)
  • Charles Wolley-Dod (1826–1904)
  • John Wright (1836–1916)
  • George Wythes (1851–1916)

1900–1909

1910–1919

1920–1929

1930–1939

  • 1931
  • 1933
    • Frederick William Millard (1864–1964)
  • 1934
  • 1935
    • Amos Perry (1871–1953), of Perry's Plant Farm[5]
  • 1936
    • Stephenson Robert Clarke (1862–1948), of Borde Hill[20]
    • James Comber (1866–1953), of Nymans, Handcross[21]
    • Frederick Augustus Secrett (1886–1964) [22]
  • 1938
    • William Fleming Bewley (1891–1976) [23]
  • 1939
    • Charles Percival Raffill M.B.E.(1876–1951), Curator, Kew Gardens. Raffill was also honoured in 1934 as an Associate of Honour of the Royal Horticultural Society (AHRHS).[24]

1940–1949

1950–1959

1960–1969

1970–1979

1980–1989

1990–1999

2000–2009

  • 2001
  • 2002
    • David Austin (1926–2018) for his rose breeding[71][72]
  • 2003[73]
    • Peter Beales (1936–2013) for his rose breeding and media promotion of gardening
    • Peter Seabrook (1935–) for his rose breeding
    • Andrew Dunn for his pioneering of virus-free rootstock
  • 2004[1]
    • Ray Bilton for his work with orchid hybrids
    • David S. Ingram (1941–) for his pioneering research into plant diseases
    • Alan Titchmarsh for his broadcasting and authorial gardening educational outreach[74]
  • 2005[75]
    • Martin Lane Fox for his work in landscape garden design
    • Tony Lord for his work as a garden photographer and horticultural consultant
    • Edmund Leopold de Rothschild for his work with rhododendron hybrids
    • Tom Wood for his administrative work promoting horticulture
  • 2006[76]
    • Jim Buttress, for his work as a garden show judge
    • Sibylle Kreutzberger, for her work at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent
    • Pamela Schwerdt, for her work at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent
    • Dr. Henry Oakeley, for his scientific work on orchids, the genera Lycaste, Ida and Anguloa
  • 2007[77]
    • Sir Richard Carew Pole (1938–) – former RHS President
    • Colin Ellis – "for his long and distinguished service since 1983 with RHS Council and numerous committees."
    • Christopher Grey-Wilson – for "his many achievements as botanist, photographer, botanical explorer and author of many books and articles."
    • Brian Self – "for his lifetime of service to amateur and professional fruit growers."
  • 2008
    • John Ravenscroft – "for his plantsmanship, entrepreneurial talent and encyclopaedic knowledge of plants."
  • 2009
    • The Prince of Wales- "for his passion for plants, sustainable gardening and the environment."[78]
    • Lady Skelmersdale [79]
    • Lord Howick [79]
    • John Humphris [79]

2010–present

  • 2010
    • John Massey – "for his valuable contribution to plantbreeding "
    • Peter R. Dawson [50]
    • Michael Hickson [50]
    • Robert T. Hillier [50]
    • Dowager Marchioness Salisbury [50]
  • 2011[80]
    • Giles Coode-Adams
    • Maurice C. Foster
    • Richard Webb
  • 2012[81]
  • 2013[82]
  • 2014
  • 2015 Not awarded
  • 2016 [84]
    • Johan Hermans
    • Mark Flanagan (posthumously)
  • 2017 [85]
  • 2018 [86]
  • 2019
    • Fergus Garrett
    • Tony Kirkham
    • Bill Simpson
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See also

References

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