History | American Camp | English Camp | Formal Garden
Formal Garden
The English Formal Garden is one of the more beloved
features of San Juan Island National Historical Park, generating
enthusiastic comments from visitors from around the world — but
especially from the United Kingdom.
Perhaps thinking of their stomachs as well as being practical minded, the British Royal Marine Light Infantry first planted a vegetable garden on the spot shortly after arriving on Garrison Bay in March 1860. The camp site then was a tangle of vegetation shooting up wildly from an enormous shell midden created over the centuries around an ancient Salish village. The marines leveled the snowy-white mounds of shells to create a parade ground and used one especially fertile spot for the garden. By 1867, a new commander, Captain William A. Delacombe, arrived accompanied by his wife and children. With a larger vegetable garden already underway elsewhere in the camp, Delacombe decided to use the original site for a formal garden in the “Gardenesque” style developed in the early 1800s by John Claudius Loudon, an English horticulturist and writer on landscape design. Not only would the garden remind the captain’s family of home thousands of miles away, it would provide a clear, yet gentle boundary between enlisted and officer territory. The garden you see before you today was planted on almost exactly the same spot in 1972 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the boundary settlement. As with Louden’s concept, this garden is a combination of art, logic and science, the geometric design featuring 13 beds of flowers and shrubs in a circular pattern. Today the garden is maintained by the park’s maintenance division with the help of volunteers from the community. Each spring more than 700 annuals are planted among the hedges providing visitors with spectacular views by mid-summer. In 1999, with funds provided through the Recreation Fee Demonstration Program, the park will install a gravity-fed, water-efficient irrigation system in the garden. The new irrigation system will reduce hand-watering by nearly 70 percent enabling volunteers to manage the garden, freeing park staff to work on other maintenance projects, and ensuring visitor enjoyment of the garden throughout the summer.
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For Additional Information Contact: San Juan Island National Historic
Park
For more information visit the National Park Service website
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