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I've always had an interest in gardens and in the natural world. I soon realized that these were more than just flowers to me, but people, places, pictures, history, thoughts...
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Tuesday, January 29, 2019

A life in book dedications: Jane Webb Loudon (1807-1858)

The life of Jane Webb Loudon (1807-1858), writer on gardening and botany and magazine editor, in some of her book dedications.

Instructions in Gardening for Ladies. 
London: John Murray, 1840



























J. C. Loudon, John Claudius Loudon (1783-1843), botanist, garden designer and prolific author. They married on 14th September 1830.

The Young Naturalist's Journey: or the Travels of Agnes Merton and Her Mama. 
London: William Smith, 1840


Agnes Loudon Spofforth (1832-1863) only child of John and Jane Loudon. Agnes was a precocious and talented writer. She published "The Lost Gloves, or We Shall See. A Story for Little Girls" in 1845 and wrote six of the eleven stories in: 
Tales for young people.
edited by Mrs Loudon 
London: Bowdery & Kerby, 1846
The Ladies' Flower-Garden of Ornamental Annuals. 
London, William Smith, 1840 
Countess Radnor was Lady Mary Augusta Grimston (1821-1879) one of the maids of honour at the Coronation of Queen Victoria on 28th June 1838 and one of the Queen's bridesmaids on 10th February 1840. She married Jacob, Viscount Folkestone, afterwards Earl of Radnor on 30th October 1840. Their seat was Longford Castle, near Salisbury in Wiltshire.  
She is mentioned in the Dictionary Of British And Irish Botanists And Horticulturalists. 

The Ladies' Companion to the Flower Garden, being an Alphabetical Arrangement of all the ornamental plants usually grown in gardens and shrubberies, with full directions for their culture.
London: William Smith, 1841




















Mrs. Lawrence was Louisa Lawrence (1803–1855), famous gardener and horticulturalist. A friend of JWL who knew her garden at Ealing Park, Middlesex, very well. Mrs Lawrence's husband, the famous surgeon William Lawrence, treated John Loudon.
The four flowers of the plate are named after JWL's husband: 1. Passiflora Loudoni, 2. Adesmia Loudonia, 3. Isopogon Loudoni 4. Loudonia aurea.

After Mrs Lawrence's death in 1855, the dedication changed. 
London: Bradbury & Evans, 1858. 1858. Edition. 7th ed.






















The Amateur Gardener's Calendar; Being a guide as to what should by done in a garden in each month of the year.
London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1847
Lady Peel was Julia Floyd (1795-1859) married to the British statesman Sir Robert Peel,  twice Prime Minister.
After her husband's death, JWL received a pension of £ 100 per annum from the Civil List.
The book was revised by William Robinson in 1870. He writes,



Facts from the World of Nature: Animate and Inanimate. 
London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1847
 
JWL dedicated this book to Charles Waterton (1782-1865), naturalist, taxidermist and author of "Wanderings in South America" and "Essays on Natural History". One of her husband's friends, Waterton had often welcomed John and Jane to his house, Walton Hall, in Yorkshire.

In 1844, Waterton had dedicated the second volume of "Essays on Natural History" to JWL. In the Preface, he writes:

JWL's last book has no dedication, but one of her beautiful covers: emerald green cloth with golden floral decorations.

My own garden; or, The young gardener's year book 
London: Kerby & Sons, 1855













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