Forgotten Women Gardeners - Maud Grieve
Date and time
Location
Online event
Refund policy
This talk is the third in our online series showcasing some more unsung women gardeners on Tues @ 10 from 3 May, £5 each or all 4 for £16.
About this event
Following the success of our last two series on forgotten women gardeners we’re delighted to be introducing you to 4 more unsung heroines.
This ticket is for this individual session and costs £5, and you may purchase tickets for other individual sessions via the links below, or you may purchase a ticket for the entire course of 4 sessions at a cost of £16 via the link here.
Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and a link to the recorded session (available for 1 week) will be sent shortly afterwards.
Due to a recent Apple decision to charge a 30% fee for paid online events unfortunately you may no longer be able to purchase this ticket from the Eventbrite iOS app. Please use a web browser on desktop or mobile to purchase or follow the link here.
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Week 1. 3 May: Women at Wrest: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.
Week 2. 10 May: Edith, Lady Londonderry: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.
Week 3. 17 May: Maud Grieve: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.
Week 4. 24 May: Lady Henry Somerset: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.
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Week 3. 17 May: ‘Now let me tell you about that wonderful plant’: Maud Grieve The inspirational herbalist, writer, teacher, and gardener with Claire de Carle
Maud Grieve was born in London in 1858. She spent her early married life in India, on their return at the end of the 19th century the couple built a house, The Whin’s in Chalfont St Peter where Maud established a beautiful garden. At the outbreak of World War One she transformed her garden into a herb farm to meet the urgent need for medicinal plants by the pharmaceutical industry. She was also involved in setting up the ‘Herb Growing Association’. She supplied plants and seeds and pamphlets on their cultivation and established a training school for women and ex-servicemen from the colonies. In 1918 she let out her drying shed to the war artists Paul and John Nash where they accomplished some of their finest war commissions. Maud is probably best remembered for her book The Modern Herbal, which was published in 1931, is still relevant today.
Claire de Carle is the chair and a trustee of Buckinghamshire Gardens Trust which is celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2022. She was instrumental in the establishment of the Trust’s Research & Recording project in 2013 which has produced reports on around 100 locally important historic gardens. She enjoys researching and writing about little known historic landscape gardens and more recently she has set up two other projects: Artists and their Gardens and Public Parks in Buckinghamshire. She lectures to local groups about Buckinghamshire gardens and Maud Grieve, the herbalist who was the subject of her MA dissertation. Claire lives in Oakley a small village on the Bucks/Oxon border, in her spare time she works on her garden that she and her husband have created over the last seven years.
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