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History of Early American Landscape Design

Difference between revisions of "Bower"

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(Bowery) <br/>
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See also: [[Nursery]]
 +
 
==History==
 
==History==
  
In eighteenth- and nineteenth-century  
+
[[File:1057.jpg|thumb|left|Fig. 1, Hannah Cohoon, “A Bower of Mulberry Trees,” September 13, 1854.]]
landscape-design vocabulary, the term  
+
 
bower was closely related to arbor. The two  
+
[[File:1270.jpg|thumb|right|Fig. 2, Solomon Drowne, ''[[Botanic Garden]], 1818'', 1818.]]
features held several common characteristics:  
+
In 18th- and 19th-century landscape-design vocabulary, the term bower was closely related to [[arbor]]. The two features held several common characteristics: the use of intertwined trees and other vegetation, the creation of shaded areas, and their siting at the end of [[walk]]s. Further refinement of this definition is complicated by the lack of explicit descriptive language in related accounts. William Faux’s 1819 description of Nathaniel Russell’s garden in Charleston, in which he simply notes bowers of flowering and fruit trees, or C. M. Hovey’s brief reference, in 1840, to a shady bower at James Arnold’s estate in New Bedford, Massachusetts, each represents this problem. In addition, a bower had similar functions to an [[arbor]], such as serving as an outdoor living or dining space.
the use of intertwined trees and other  
+
 
vegetation, the creation of shaded areas,  
+
Nonetheless, some writers made distinctions between bowers and [[arbor]]s. [[Noah Webster]], for example, in 1828 specified that a bower had a centralized plan—round or [[square]]—whereas an [[arbor]] was long in plan and arched in cross-section. [[Manasseh Cutler|Manasseh Cutler's]] mention in 1787 of encircled bowers preceded this distinction. It should be noted, however, that this rule was not always followed. For example, [[A. J. Downing]] labeled many structures as [[arbor]]s that were either round or [[square]] in form, and Fortescue Cuming, in 1810, described a “long frame bowery.” James E. Teschemacher’s 1835 definition of an [[arbor]] as an “artificial bower” indicated that for him the distinction was to be made between the man-made [[arbor]] and the natural bower.
and their siting at the end of walks. Further  
+
 
refinement of this definition is complicated  
+
In general, three different types of bowers can be identified. The first was composed of planted vegetation manipulated into a covered shelter, as described in 1755 by Samuel Johnson. An example of this type is a Shaker illustration of 1854 of a bower constructed of intertwined trees and used as a dining setting [Fig. 1].<ref>This image may allude to feast grounds built by Shaker communities at mid-century. For more about Shaker imagery, see Sally M. Promey, ''Spiritual Spectacles: Vision and Image in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Shakerism'' (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/JMPTCMS8 view on Zotero].</ref> A bower described in the ''Virginia Argus'' (1799) as suitable “for the accommodation of company” may have been similar in form and size to this Shaker bower.
by the lack of explicit descriptive language  
+
 
in related accounts. William Faux’s 1819  
+
[[File:0579.jpg|thumb|left|Fig. 3, Lewis Miller, “A narrow [[View/Vista|vista]] carpeted with rich green grass. . . on each side shrinks the bowery shade. . .” [detail], in ''Orbis Pictus'' (c. 1849), p. 100]]
description of Nathaniel Russell’s garden in  
+
The second type was a built structure over which vegetation was trained. William Byrd II’s 1728 description of a habitation of a “Marooner” is an early instance of a bower being defined as a constructed shelter. Teschemacher gives a detailed account (1835) of the construction of a 19th-century bower, one in which iron [[arch]]es were covered with climbing vines. In 1806, [[Bernard M’Mahon]] specified that bowers were “light ornamental buildings” suitable for terminating garden [[walk]]s [Fig. 2] or complementing open grassy areas in the garden. William Dickinson Martin, in 1809, referred to a “neatly built” bower and William Bailey Lang in 1845 noted a rustic bower that had a shingle roof, with a corner post of rough cedar, “to which that hardy-plant, the Virginia creeper, has been trained.” [[A. J. Downing]] also advised in 1848 that such bowers could be “easily and economically constructed,” an idea for rustic buildings that was shared by [[Bernard M’Mahon|M’Mahon]] (1806).
Charleston, in which he simply notes bowers  
+
 
of flowering and fruit trees, or C. M. Hovey’s  
+
An important difference, however, marks [[Bernard M'Mahon|M’Mahon’s]] and [[Andrew Jackson Downing|Downing’s]] references to constructed bowers.  [[Bernard M'Mahon|M’Mahon]] argued that such features were appropriate for “spacious pleasure grounds,” while Downing limited their use to more “humble and simple cottage grounds, the rural [[walk]]s of the [[ferme ornée]], and the modest garden of the suburban amateur.” [[Andrew Jackson Downing|Downing’s]] sentiments reflect the increasing attention paid to style and decorum by 19th-century treatise writers and suggest that bowers were associated with the [[rustic-style]] gardens that doubled as both aesthetic and utilitarian spaces. Such distinctions were not without precedent: In 1804 [[Thomas Jefferson]] commented that bowers were more suitable for a [[kitchen garden]] than for [[pleasure ground]]s.
brief reference, in 1840, to a shady bower at  
+
 
James Arnold’s estate in New Bedford,  
+
[[File: 0323.jpg|thumb|right|Fig. 4, William Russell Birch, “[[View]] from the Elysian Bower, Springland, Pennsylvna the residence of Mr W. Birch,” 1808, in William Russell Birch and Emily Cooperman, ''The Country Seats of the United States'' (2009), p. 81, pl. 20. ]]
Mass., each represents this problem. In addition,  
+
The third type of bower, a naturally occurring and seemingly unmanipulated collection of trees and [[shrub]]s creating a shady enclave or space, is well documented in both descriptions and images of American gardens. For example, Lewis Miller’s mid-19th century poem about “bowery shade” is illustrated with an image of two girls nestled underneath the curving branches of a small tree, which constitutes such a bower [Fig. 3]. The “Elysian Bower” at Springland, near Bristol, Pennsylvania, illustrated in an 1808 view, exemplifies the application of this term to a secluded gathering of shade trees [Fig. 4].
a bower had similar functions to an  
+
 
arbor, such as serving as an outdoor living or  
+
As a final note, one of [[Noah Webster|Noah Webster's]] definitions for bower was for “a country [[seat]]; a cottage.” To date, no example of this use of bower has been found. This absence confirms the observation that although treatise writers and lexicographers set forth specific definitions of bower, observers of the American landscape tended to use the term to mean simply a specific natural or artificially constructed shady space occurring either in a garden or landscape.
dining space.  
+
 
 +
—''Anne L. Helmreich''
  
Nonetheless, some writers made distinctions
+
<hr>
between bowers and arbors (see
 
Arbor). Noah Webster, for example, in 1828
 
specified that a bower had a centralized
 
plan—round or square—whereas an arbor
 
was long in plan and arched in cross-section.
 
Rev. Manasseh Cutler’s mention in 1787 of
 
encircled bowers preceded this distinction.
 
It should be noted, however, that this rule
 
was not always followed. For example, A. J.
 
Downing labeled many structures as arbors
 
that were either round or square in form,
 
and Fortescue Cuming, in 1810, described a
 
“long frame bowery.” James E. Teschemacher’s
 
1835 definition of an arbor as an “artificial
 
bower” indicated that for him the distinction
 
was to be made between the man-made
 
arbor and the natural bower.
 
  
In general, three different types of bowers
+
==Texts==
can be identified. The first was composed of
+
===Usage===
planted vegetation manipulated into a covered
 
shelter, as described in 1755 by Samuel
 
Johnson. An example of this type is a Shaker
 
illustration of 1854 of a bower constructed of
 
intertwined trees and used as a dining setting
 
[Fig. 1].1 A bower described in the Virginia
 
Argus (1799) as suitable “for the accommodation
 
of company” may have been similar in
 
form and size to this Shaker bower.
 
  
The second type was a built structure over
+
*Byrd, William, II, 1728, describing the border of Virginia and North Carolina (quoted in Lounsbury 1994: 41)<ref name="Lounsbury">Carl R. Lounsbury, ed., ''An Illustrated Glossary of Early Southern Architecture and Landscape'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/UK5TCUQQ view on Zotero].</ref>
which vegetation was trained. William Byrd
 
II’s 1728 description of a habitation of a
 
  
“Marooner” is an early instance of a bower
+
:“. . . not far from the Inlet, dwelt a Marooner, that Modestly call’d himself a Hermit, tho’ he forfeited that Name by Suffering a wanton Female to cohabit with Him. His Habitation was a '''Bower''', cover’d with Bark after the Indian Fashion, which in that mild Situation protected him pretty well from the Weather.”
being defined as a constructed shelter.  
 
Teschemacher gives a detailed account
 
(1835) of the construction of a nineteenth-
 
century bower, one in which iron arches were
 
covered with climbing vines. In 1806,
 
Bernard M’Mahon specified that bowers
 
were “light ornamental buildings” suitable
 
for terminating garden walks [Fig. 2] or complementing
 
open grassy areas in the garden.
 
William Dickinson Martin, in 1809, referred
 
to a “neatly built” bower and William Bailey
 
Lang in 1845 noted a rustic bower that had a  
 
shingle roof, with a corner post of rough
 
cedar, “to which that hardy-plant, the Virginia
 
creeper, has been trained.” A. J. Downing
 
also advised in 1848 that such bowers
 
could be “easily and economically constructed,”  
 
an idea for rustic buildings that
 
was shared by M’Mahon (1806).
 
  
An important difference, however, marks
 
M’Mahon’s and Downing’s references to
 
constructed bowers. M’Mahon argued that
 
such features were appropriate for “spacious
 
pleasure grounds,” while Downing limited
 
their use to more “humble and simple
 
cottage grounds, the rural walks of the ferme
 
ornée, and the modest garden of the suburban
 
amateur.” Downing’s sentiments reflect
 
the increasing attention paid to style and
 
decorum by nineteenth-century treatise
 
writers and suggest that bowers were associated
 
with the rustic-style gardens that
 
doubled as both aesthetic and utilitarian
 
spaces. Such distinctions were not without
 
precedent: In 1804 Thomas Jefferson com
 
  
 +
*[[Thomas Jefferson|Jefferson, Thomas]], April 9, 1786, describing the gardens at Blenheim Palace, estate of the Duke of Marlborough, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England (1944: 114)<ref>Thomas Jefferson, ''The Garden Book'', ed. by Edwin M. Betts (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1944), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/8ZA5VRP5 view on Zotero].</ref>
  
mented that bowers were more suitable for
+
:“Rosamund’s '''bower''' was near where is now a little [[grove]], about two hundred yards from the palace. The well is near where the '''bower''' was.”
a kitchen garden than for pleasure grounds.  
 
  
The third type of bower, a naturally occurring
 
and seemingly unmanipulated collection
 
of trees and shrubs creating a shady enclave
 
or space, is well documented in both descriptions
 
and images of American gardens. For
 
example, Lewis Miller’s mid-nineteenthcentury
 
poem about “bowery shade” is illustrated
 
with an image of two girls nestled
 
underneath the curving branches of a small
 
tree, which constitutes such a bower [Fig. 3].
 
The “Elysian Bower” at Springland, near Bristol,
 
Pa., illustrated in an 1808 view, exemplifies
 
the application of this term to a secluded
 
gathering of shade trees [Fig. 4].
 
  
As a final note, one of Noah Webster’s
+
*[[Manasseh Cutler|Cutler, Manasseh]], July 14, 1787, describing [[Gray's Garden|Gray’s Tavern]], Philadelphia, PA (1987: 1:275)<ref>William Parker Cutler, ''Life, Journals, and Correspondence of Rev. Manasseh Cutler, LL.D.'' (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1987), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/3PBNT7H9 view on Zotero].</ref>
definitions for bower was for “a country
 
seat; a cottage.” To date, no example of this
 
use of bower has been found. This absence
 
confirms the observation that although treatise
 
writers and lexicographers set forth
 
specific definitions of bower, observers of
 
the American landscape tended to use the
 
term to mean simply a specific natural or
 
artificially constructed shady space occurring
 
either in a garden or landscape.  
 
  
ALH
+
:“We then rambled over the Gardens, which are large—seemed to be in a number of detached areas, all different in size and form. The [[alley]]s were none of them straight, nor were there any two alike. At every end, side, and corner, there were [[Summerhouse|''summer-houses'']], [[arbor]]s covered with vines or flowers, or shady '''bowers''' encircled with trees and flowering [[shrub]]s, each of which was formed in a different taste.”
  
==Texts==
 
  
===Usage===
+
*Anonymous, June 7, 1799, describing a property for sale near Richmond, VA (''Virginia Argus'')
 +
 
 +
:“Valuable Property FOR Sale at the [[Bowling Green]], near Richmond, that much frequented Tavern and [[public Garden]]. . . The garden is very extensive. . . with [[Summer House]]s, and '''bowers''' for the accommodation of company.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*[[Thomas Jefferson|Jefferson, Thomas]], 1804, describing [[Monticello]], [[plantation]] of [[Thomas Jefferson]], Charlottesville, VA (quoted in Nichols and Griswold 1978: 110–11)<ref>Frederick Doveton Nichols and Ralph E. Griswold, ''Thomas Jefferson, Landscape Architect'' (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1978), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/RUZC4Q3D view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“At the Rocks. . . a turning Tuscan temple. . . proportions of Pantheon, . . . at the Point, . . . build Demosthenes’s lantern. . . The [[kitchen garden]] is not the place for ornaments of this kind. '''bowers''' and treillages suit that better, & these [[temple]]s will be better disposed in the [[pleasure ground]]s.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Martin, William Dickinson, c. 1809, describing the garden of a tavern keeper in Salisbury, NC (quoted in Lounsbury 1994: 41)<ref name="Lounsbury"></ref>
 +
 
 +
:“In the centre of the Garden. . . was a handsome '''bower''', neatly built, & adorned with English Honey Suckle, Woodbine & a few Jessamine.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Cuming, Fortescue, 1810, describing Canonsburgh, PA (quoted in Cummings 1949: 217, 227)<ref name="Cumming">Richard O. Cummings, ''The American Ice Harvests: A Historical Study in Technology, 1800–1918'' (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1949), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/3WX5T2BF view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“The most striking thing I saw here was my Landlord’s garden, which is both good and handsome, being laid out with taste, abounding in a variety of the best culinary vegetables, and having some very pleasant shady '''bowers''', where the student, or man of leisure, sheltered from the noonday sun, and inhaling the fragrance of the surrounding aromatick [''sic''] plants might luxuriantly roam into the realms of fancy.”
 +
 
 +
:“What adds to the beauty of Mr. Tannehill’s seat is, a handsome [[grove]] of about two acres of young black oaks, northwest of his dwelling, through the middle of which runs a long frame '''bowery''', on whose end fronting the road, is seen this motto, ‘''1808, Dedicated to Virtue, Liberty, and Independence’'' Here a portion of the citizens meet on each 4th of July, to hail with joyful hearts the day that gave birth to the liberties and happiness of their country.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Smith, Margaret Bayard, 1811, describing Sidney, summer retreat of Margaret Bayard Smith, near Washington, DC (1906: 88)<ref>Margaret Bayard Smith, ''The First Forty Years of Washington Society'', ed. Gaillard Hunt (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1906), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/FTDFHRFH view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“When Mr. Tracy, (who was an important personage on the occasion) brought the cart to the door Lytleton and all the boys jump’d in it and went to the [[wood]]s for boughs. L. drove furiously along to the no small delight of the boys and soon return’d like the moving wood in Macbeth. The [[Piazza]] was soon transform’d into a '''bower''', —every hand was busy, —Mrs. Clay, Mr. Smith and all.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Wilson, Alexander, before 1813, describing [[Gray’s Garden]], Philadelphia, PA (quoted in Adams 1976: 339)<ref>William Howard Adams, ed., ''The Eye of Thomas Jefferson'' (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 1976), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/IWQT8BPV view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“There market-maids in lovely row,
 +
::With wallets white, were riding
 +
:::home,
 +
:“And thund’ring gigs, with powdered
 +
:::beaux,
 +
::Through Gray’s green festive
 +
:::shade to roam.
 +
:“Sweet flows the Schuylkill’s winding
 +
:::tide
 +
::By Bartram’s emblossomed
 +
:::'''bowers'''.
 +
:“Where nature sports in all her pride
 +
::Of choicest plants and fruits and
 +
:::flowers.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Faux, William, 1819, describing the garden of Nathaniel Russell, Charleston, SC (quoted in Lounsbury 1994: 41)<ref name="Lounsbury"></ref>
 +
 
 +
:“[An English visitor in Charleston] called on the venerable Nathaniel Russell, Esq., residing in a splendid mansion, surrounded by a [[wilderness]] of flowers and '''bowers''' of myrtles, oranges and lemons, smothered with fruit and flowers.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*du Pont, Sophie Madeleine, 1828, describing Eleutherian Mills, estate of Eleuthère Irénée du Pont, near Wilmington, DE (quoted in Low and Hinsley 1987: 38)<ref>Betty-Bright Low and Jacqueline Hinsley, ''Sophie du Pont, A Young Lady in America: Sketches, Diaries, & Letters, 1823–1833'' (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1987), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/U2EJBX3K view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“I thought of other Maydays; long past, when you and I were little children—of our [[walk]]s, and our plays—our '''bowers''', mudhouses, and forts, and the little fleet of boats we used to sail upon the [[pond]]—I could not help feeling sad when I thought of how we were changed—we, that once played together, walked together, studied our little lessons in partnership.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Wailes, Benjamin L. C., December 29, 1829, describing [[Lemon Hill]], estate of [[Henry Pratt]], Philadelphia, PA (quoted in Moore 1954: 359)<ref>John Hebron Moore, “A View of Philadelphia in 1829: Selections from the Journal of B. L. C. Wailes of Natchez,” ''Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography'', 78 (July 1954), 353–60, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/Z9IBV7A4 view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“But the most enchanting [[prospect]] is towards the grand pleasure [[grove]] & [[green house]] of a [[Henry Pratt|Mr. Prat[t]]], a gentleman of fortune, and to this we next proceeded by a circutous rout [''sic''], passing in view of the fish [[pond]]s, '''bowers''', rustic retreats, [[summer house]]s, [[fountain]]s, [[grotto]], &c., &c.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Committee of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 1830, describing [[Lemon Hill]], estate of [[Henry Pratt]], Philadelphia, PA (quoted in Boyd 1929: 432)<ref>James Boyd, ''A History of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 1827–1927'' (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 1929), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/UN9TRH8T view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“There are some pretty '''bowers''', [[summer house]]s, [[grotto]]s and fish [[pond]]s in this garden—the latter well stored with gold and silver fish.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Dearborn, H. A. S., 1832, describing [[Mount Auburn Cemetery]], Cambridge, MA (quoted in Harris 1832: 68)<ref>Thaddeus William Harris, ''A Discourse Delivered before the Massachusetts Horticultural Society on the Celebration of Its Fourth Anniversary, October 3, 1832'' (Cambridge, MA: E. W. Metcalf, 1832), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/3A3UDHF3 view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“To those who mourn, what a consolation to visit the '''bower'''-sequestered monument of a much loved friend, under circumstances and with associations so favorably calculated to revive agreeable recollections of the past; and when those revolting ideas are excluded, which obtrude upon the mind, while standing in the usually dreary, desolate, and ruinous repositories of the dead.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Hovey, C. M. (Charles Mason), September 1840, “Notes on Gardens and Gardening, in New Bedford, Mass.,” describing the residence of James Arnold, New Bedford, MA (''Magazine of Horticulture'' 6: 364)<ref>Charles Mason Hovey, “Notes on Gardens and Gardening, in New Bedford, Mass.,” ''Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries and Improvements in Rural Affairs'' 6, no. 9 (September 1840): 361–66, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/QQC7WWZB view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“Continuing through the winding [[walk]]s, shady '''bowers''', and umbrageous retreats, through which rustic [[seat]]s were placed, we arrived at the shell [[grotto]].”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[File: 1783.jpg|thumb|right|Fig. 5, William Bailey Lang, “Rustic Bower,” ''Views With Ground Plans, of the Highland Cottages at Roxbury'', 1845.]]
 +
*Lang, William Bailey, 1845, describing a rustic bower in Butte, MA, in ''Views with Ground Plans'' (1845: 18)<ref>William Bailey Lang, ''Views with Ground Plans, of the Highlands Cottages at Roxbury'' (Boston: L. H. Bridgham and H. E. Felch, 1845), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/7KBFF9TR view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“The Rustic '''Bower'''.—Shingle roof, painted black. The corner post of the rough cedder, to which that hardy-plant, the Virginia creeper, has been trained.” [Fig. 5]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*Earle, Pliny, January 1848, describing Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane, New York, NY (''Journal of Medicine'' 10: 63)
 +
 
 +
:“''Airing Courts, or [[Yard|Yards]]''.—There are three of these courts for the men, and four for the women. They are, with one exception, well shaded with trees, and three of them have large '''bowers''' covered with roofs, and furnished with seats for all the patients admitted into the courts.”
 +
 
 +
 
 +
*[[Andrew Jackson Downing|Downing, Andrew Jackson]], 1849, describing the residence of James Arnold, New Bedford, MA (1849; repr.,1991: 57)<ref>A. J. [Andrew Jackson] Downing, ''A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening, Adapted to North America'', 4th ed. (1849; repr. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1991), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/K7BRCDC5 view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 
 +
:“In the environs of New Bedford are many beautiful residences. Among these, we desire particularly to notice the residence of James Arnold, Esq. There is scarcely a small place in New England, where the [[Pleasure ground|''pleasure-grounds'']] are so full of variety, and in such perfect order and keeping, as at this charming spot; and its winding [[walk]]s, open bits of [[lawn]], [[shrub]]s and plants grouped on turf, shady '''bowers''', and rustic [[seat]]s, all most agreeably combined, render this a very interesting and instructive suburban [[seat]].”
 +
 
  
 
===Citations===
 
===Citations===
 +
 +
*Johnson, Samuel, 1755, ''A Dictionary of the English Language'' (1755: 1:n.p.)<ref>Samuel Johnson, ''A Dictionary of the English Language: In Which the Words Are Deduced from the Originals and Illustrated in the Different Significations by Examples from the Best Writers'', 2 vols. (London: W. Strahan for J. and P. Knapton, 1755), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/GE2JPJR3 view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“'''BOWER'''. ''n''. s. [from ''bough'' or ''branch'', or from the verb to ''bow'' or ''bend''.]
 +
:“1. An [[arbour]]; a sheltered place covered with green trees, twined and bent.”
 +
 +
 +
*[[M’Mahon, Bernard]], 1806, ''The American Gardener’s Calendar'' (1806: 64)<ref>Bernard M'Mahon, ''The American Gardener’s Calendar: Adapted to the Climates and Seasons of the United States. Containing a Complete Account of All the Work Necessary to Be Done. . . for Every Month of the Year. . .'' (Philadelphia: Printed by B. Graves for the author, 1806), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/HU4JIS9C/ view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“In some spacious [[pleasure-ground]]s various light ornamental buildings and erections are introduced, as ornaments to particular departments; such as [[temple]]s, '''bowers''', banquetting houses, [[alcove]]s, [[grotto]]s, rural [[seat]]s, cottages, [[fountain]]s, [[obelisk]]s, [[statue]]s, and other edifices; these and the like are usually erected in the different parts, in openings between the divisions of the ground, and contiguous to the terminations of grand [[walk]]s, &c.
 +
:“Some of these kinds of ornaments, however, being very expensive, are rather sparingly introduced; sometimes a [[temple]] is presented at the termination of a grand [[walk]] or opening, or sometimes a [[temple]], banqueting-house, or '''bower''' is erected in the centre of some spacious opening or grass-ground in the internal divisions; other parts present [[alcove]]s, '''bowers''', [[grotto]]s, rural-[[seat|seats]], &c. at the termination of different [[walk]]s.”
 +
 +
 +
*[[J. C. (John Claudius) Loudon|Loudon, J. C. (John Claudius)]], 1826, ''An Encyclopaedia of Gardening'' (1826: 809)<ref>J. C. (John Claudius) Loudon, ''An Encyclopaedia of Gardening; Comprising the Theory and Practice of Horticulture, Floriculture, Arboriculture, and Landscape-Gardening'', 4th ed. (London: Longman et al., 1826), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/KNKTCA4W view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“6157. . . Light '''bowers''' formed of lattice-work, and covered with climbers, are in general most suitable to [[parterre]]s; plain covered seats suit the general [[walk]]s of the [[shrubbery]].”
 +
 +
 +
*Prince, William, 1828, ''A Short Treatise on Horticulture'' (1828: 87, 88, 145–47, 149)<ref>William Prince, ''A Short Treatise on Horticulture'' (New York: T. and J. Swords, 1828), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/I6VKDDB8 view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“''Clematis virginica, or Virginian Virgin’s '''Bower'''''.—This is of most rapid growth, and produces, in July and August, a great abundance of white flowers, which are very fragrant; it is well calculated to cover [[arbour]]s and '''bowers'''. . .
 +
:“''Clematis viticella, or European Virgin’s '''Bower'''''.—This is a native of the south of Europe, and is greatly admired as a vine for covering '''bowers''', or training against the sides of houses, or in other situations where vines are wanted. . .
 +
:“''Sweetbriar, or Eglantine''.—This delightful species of the rose family is well calculated to train against the sides of houses, or up the [[pillar]]s of the [[piazza]], or to intermingle with the vines which entwine '''bowers''', &c. . .
 +
:“The Champney, Noisette, [rose] and most of the varieties, may be trained against the sides of houses, over '''bowers''', &c. to a very considerable length, although not quite so rampant in their growth as the different varieties of the Multiflora. . .
 +
:“The climbing, or running roses, suitable to train against buildings, or on [[arbour]]s, '''bowers''', &c. are the following:—Common Multiflora, Roxburgh’s White Multiflora, Lady Banks’ Double White, Greville’s Superb, Champneys, Noisette, Boursaultian, Hybrid, Macartney’s, &c. . .”
 +
 +
 +
*[[Webster, Noah]], 1828, ''An American Dictionary of the English Language'' (1828: 1:n.p.)<ref>Noah Webster, ''An American Dictionary of the English Language'', 2 vols. (New York: S. Converse, 1828), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/N7BSU467 view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“'''BOW'ER''', ''n''. [Sax. ''bur'', a chamber or private apartment, a hut, a cottage; W. ''bwr'', an inclosure.]
 +
:“1. A shelter or covered place in a garden, made with boughs of trees bent and twined together. It differs from ''[[arbor]]'' in that it may be round or [[square]], whereas an arbor is long and arched. ''Milton. Encyc.''
 +
:“2. A bed-chamber; any room in a house except the hall. ''Spencer. Mason.''
 +
:“3. A country [[seat]]; a cottage. ''Shenston., B. Johnson.''
 +
:“4. A shady recess; a [[plantation]] for shade. ''W. Brown. . .''
 +
:“'''BOW’ERY''', ''a''. Covering; shading as a '''bower'''; also, containing '''bowers'''. ''Thomson''.”
 +
 +
 +
*Teschemacher, James E., August 1, 1835, “Extracts from Foreign Publications” (''Horticultural Register'' 1: 308–9)<ref>James E. Teschemacher, “Extracts from Foreign Publications,” ''Horticultural Register, and Gardener’s Magazine'' 1 (August 1, 1835), 304–9, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/CNPGMS5X/ view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
:“From an article ''On the various form and character of Arbours as objects of use or ornament either in gardens or wild scenery [from Paxton’s Horticultural Register],'' we extract the following passages.
 +
:“‘A singularly beautiful structure which may be classed with this kind of garden decoration has been made in Ireland.
 +
:“‘A circular space of about sixty feet diameter, in the centre of dressed ground with scattered [[clump]]s of evergreen [[shrub]]s, surrounded by lofty trees, is wholly enclosed by a continued arcade of iron [[arch]]es. . . All the [[arch]]es are thickly covered with climbing plants of strong rapid growth, which proceed along the wires to the top of the pole. . .
 +
:“‘The interior is an [[arbor]] of great magnitude, not so closely covered as everywhere absolutely to exclude the sun, but yet so as to render it always shady and agreeable. . .
 +
:“‘The entire effect is good, and this may be considered as one of the best specimens of the artificial '''bower''' of the present day.’”
 +
 +
 +
*Johnson, George William, 1847, ''A Dictionary of Modern Gardening'' (1857: 98)<ref>George William Johnson, ''A Dictionary of Modern Gardening'', ed. David Landreth (Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1847), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/D6PQSNAN view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“'''BOWER'''. See ''[[Arbor]]''.”
 +
 +
 +
*[[A. J. Downing|Downing, A. J.]], February 1848, “Hints and Designs for Rustic Buildings” (''Horticulturist'' 2: 363–64)<ref>A. J. Downing, “Hints and Designs for Rustic Buildings,” ''Horticulturist and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste'' 2, no. 8 (February 1848): 363–65, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/keywords_in_early_american_landscape_design/items/itemKey/CPFBIUCV/q/hints%20and%20designs view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
:“But the more humble and simple cottage grounds, the rural [[walk]]s of the ''[[ferme ornée]]'', and the modest garden of the suburban amateur, have also their ornamental objects and rural buildings—in their place, as charming and spirited as the more artistical embellishments which surround the palladian villa.
 +
:“These are the seats, '''bowers''', [[grotto]]es and [[arbor]]s, of [[rustic_style|rustic work]]—than which nothing can be more easily and economically constructed, nor can add more to the rural or [[picturesque]] expression of the scene.
 +
:“Those simple buildings, often constructed only of a few logs and twisted limbs of trees, are in good keeping with the simplest or the grandest forms of nature.”
 +
 +
 +
*Elder, Walter, 1849, ''The Cottage Garden of America'' (1849: 219)<ref>Walter Elder, ''The Cottage Garden of America'' (Philadelphia: Moss, 1849), [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/NNC7BTFT view on Zotero].</ref>
 +
 +
::“A. What place is that covered with roses and Honeysuckles?
 +
::“B. That’s a shady '''bower''' with seats in it.
 +
::“A. Is that another shady '''bower''', covered with sweet scented clematis and roses?
 +
::“B. That’s a building for the use of the family.”
 +
 +
 +
*Miller, Lewis, c. 1850, description on a drawing of an idealized scene in the ''Orbis Pictus'' (Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Center, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation)
 +
 +
::“While the fish, A narrow [[vista]], carpeted with rich— green grass. invites my tread: here Showers light in golden dots. So blended, that the very air
 +
::Seems network as i enter there. On each Side Shrinks the '''bowery''' Shade: Before me Spreads an Emerald glade.” [See Fig. 3]
 +
 +
<hr>
  
 
==Images==
 
==Images==
 +
===Inscribed===
 +
 +
<gallery widths="170px" heights="170px" perrow="7">
 +
 +
File: 1269.jpg|Solomon Drowne, Detailed plan of a [[botanic garden]] at Brown University, n.d.
 +
 +
File: 0323.jpg|William Russell Birch, “[[View]] from the Elysian '''Bower''', Springland, Pennsylvna the residence of Mr W. Birch,” 1808, in ''The Country Seats of the United States'' (2009), 81, pl. 20.
 +
 +
File: 1270.jpg|Solomon Drowne, ''[[Botanic Garden]], 1818'', 1818. The "bower" inscription can be found between the "shrubbery" and "college inclosure" inscriptions, to the right.
 +
 +
File: 1356.jpg|'''Bower''' formed of lattice-work, in ''An Encyclopaedia of Gardening'' (1826), 809, fig. 563.
 +
 +
File: 1783.jpg|William Bailey Lang, “[[Rustic_style|Rustic]] '''Bower''',” ''[[View]]s With Ground Plans, of the Highland Cottages at Roxbury'', 1845.
 +
 +
File: 0367.jpg|Anonymous, “[[View]] in the Grounds of James Arnold, Esq.” in [[A. J. Downing]], ''A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening'' (1849), pl. opp. 57.
 +
 +
File: 0579.jpg|Lewis Miller, “A narrow [[View/Vista|vista]] carpeted with rich green grass. . . on each side shrinks the '''bowery''' shade. . . ” [detail], in ''Orbis Pictus'', c. 1850.
  
<references></references>
+
File: 1057.jpg|Hannah Cohoon, “A '''Bower''' of Mulberry Trees,” September 13, 1854.
 +
 
 +
</gallery>
 +
 
 +
===Attributed===
 +
 
 +
<gallery widths="170px" heights="170px" perrow="7">
 +
 
 +
File: 0005.jpg|Amy Cox, attr., ''Box [[Grove]]'', c. 1800.
 +
 
 +
File: 0713.jpg|Jacob Marling, ''The May Queen (The Crowning of Flora)'', 1816.
 +
 
 +
File: 0489.jpg|John William Hill (artist), William James Bennett (engraver), ''New York, from Brooklyn Heights'', 1837. Bower is seen in lower far right corner.
 +
 
 +
File: 0891.jpg|Edwin Whitefield, Sketch of Joseph H. Jennings’ House, 1841–44.
 +
</gallery>
 +
 
 +
<hr>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
  
 
<references></references>
 
<references></references>
 +
 +
[[Category: Keywords]]
 +
[[Category: Plant Support]]
 +
[[Category: Architecture]]

Latest revision as of 13:35, March 29, 2021

(Bowery)
See also: Nursery

History

Fig. 1, Hannah Cohoon, “A Bower of Mulberry Trees,” September 13, 1854.
Fig. 2, Solomon Drowne, Botanic Garden, 1818, 1818.

In 18th- and 19th-century landscape-design vocabulary, the term bower was closely related to arbor. The two features held several common characteristics: the use of intertwined trees and other vegetation, the creation of shaded areas, and their siting at the end of walks. Further refinement of this definition is complicated by the lack of explicit descriptive language in related accounts. William Faux’s 1819 description of Nathaniel Russell’s garden in Charleston, in which he simply notes bowers of flowering and fruit trees, or C. M. Hovey’s brief reference, in 1840, to a shady bower at James Arnold’s estate in New Bedford, Massachusetts, each represents this problem. In addition, a bower had similar functions to an arbor, such as serving as an outdoor living or dining space.

Nonetheless, some writers made distinctions between bowers and arbors. Noah Webster, for example, in 1828 specified that a bower had a centralized plan—round or square—whereas an arbor was long in plan and arched in cross-section. Manasseh Cutler's mention in 1787 of encircled bowers preceded this distinction. It should be noted, however, that this rule was not always followed. For example, A. J. Downing labeled many structures as arbors that were either round or square in form, and Fortescue Cuming, in 1810, described a “long frame bowery.” James E. Teschemacher’s 1835 definition of an arbor as an “artificial bower” indicated that for him the distinction was to be made between the man-made arbor and the natural bower.

In general, three different types of bowers can be identified. The first was composed of planted vegetation manipulated into a covered shelter, as described in 1755 by Samuel Johnson. An example of this type is a Shaker illustration of 1854 of a bower constructed of intertwined trees and used as a dining setting [Fig. 1].[1] A bower described in the Virginia Argus (1799) as suitable “for the accommodation of company” may have been similar in form and size to this Shaker bower.

Fig. 3, Lewis Miller, “A narrow vista carpeted with rich green grass. . . on each side shrinks the bowery shade. . .” [detail], in Orbis Pictus (c. 1849), p. 100

The second type was a built structure over which vegetation was trained. William Byrd II’s 1728 description of a habitation of a “Marooner” is an early instance of a bower being defined as a constructed shelter. Teschemacher gives a detailed account (1835) of the construction of a 19th-century bower, one in which iron arches were covered with climbing vines. In 1806, Bernard M’Mahon specified that bowers were “light ornamental buildings” suitable for terminating garden walks [Fig. 2] or complementing open grassy areas in the garden. William Dickinson Martin, in 1809, referred to a “neatly built” bower and William Bailey Lang in 1845 noted a rustic bower that had a shingle roof, with a corner post of rough cedar, “to which that hardy-plant, the Virginia creeper, has been trained.” A. J. Downing also advised in 1848 that such bowers could be “easily and economically constructed,” an idea for rustic buildings that was shared by M’Mahon (1806).

An important difference, however, marks M’Mahon’s and Downing’s references to constructed bowers. M’Mahon argued that such features were appropriate for “spacious pleasure grounds,” while Downing limited their use to more “humble and simple cottage grounds, the rural walks of the ferme ornée, and the modest garden of the suburban amateur.” Downing’s sentiments reflect the increasing attention paid to style and decorum by 19th-century treatise writers and suggest that bowers were associated with the rustic-style gardens that doubled as both aesthetic and utilitarian spaces. Such distinctions were not without precedent: In 1804 Thomas Jefferson commented that bowers were more suitable for a kitchen garden than for pleasure grounds.

Fig. 4, William Russell Birch, “View from the Elysian Bower, Springland, Pennsylvna the residence of Mr W. Birch,” 1808, in William Russell Birch and Emily Cooperman, The Country Seats of the United States (2009), p. 81, pl. 20.

The third type of bower, a naturally occurring and seemingly unmanipulated collection of trees and shrubs creating a shady enclave or space, is well documented in both descriptions and images of American gardens. For example, Lewis Miller’s mid-19th century poem about “bowery shade” is illustrated with an image of two girls nestled underneath the curving branches of a small tree, which constitutes such a bower [Fig. 3]. The “Elysian Bower” at Springland, near Bristol, Pennsylvania, illustrated in an 1808 view, exemplifies the application of this term to a secluded gathering of shade trees [Fig. 4].

As a final note, one of Noah Webster's definitions for bower was for “a country seat; a cottage.” To date, no example of this use of bower has been found. This absence confirms the observation that although treatise writers and lexicographers set forth specific definitions of bower, observers of the American landscape tended to use the term to mean simply a specific natural or artificially constructed shady space occurring either in a garden or landscape.

Anne L. Helmreich


Texts

Usage

  • Byrd, William, II, 1728, describing the border of Virginia and North Carolina (quoted in Lounsbury 1994: 41)[2]
“. . . not far from the Inlet, dwelt a Marooner, that Modestly call’d himself a Hermit, tho’ he forfeited that Name by Suffering a wanton Female to cohabit with Him. His Habitation was a Bower, cover’d with Bark after the Indian Fashion, which in that mild Situation protected him pretty well from the Weather.”


  • Jefferson, Thomas, April 9, 1786, describing the gardens at Blenheim Palace, estate of the Duke of Marlborough, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England (1944: 114)[3]
“Rosamund’s bower was near where is now a little grove, about two hundred yards from the palace. The well is near where the bower was.”


“We then rambled over the Gardens, which are large—seemed to be in a number of detached areas, all different in size and form. The alleys were none of them straight, nor were there any two alike. At every end, side, and corner, there were summer-houses, arbors covered with vines or flowers, or shady bowers encircled with trees and flowering shrubs, each of which was formed in a different taste.”


  • Anonymous, June 7, 1799, describing a property for sale near Richmond, VA (Virginia Argus)
“Valuable Property FOR Sale at the Bowling Green, near Richmond, that much frequented Tavern and public Garden. . . The garden is very extensive. . . with Summer Houses, and bowers for the accommodation of company.”


“At the Rocks. . . a turning Tuscan temple. . . proportions of Pantheon, . . . at the Point, . . . build Demosthenes’s lantern. . . The kitchen garden is not the place for ornaments of this kind. bowers and treillages suit that better, & these temples will be better disposed in the pleasure grounds.”


  • Martin, William Dickinson, c. 1809, describing the garden of a tavern keeper in Salisbury, NC (quoted in Lounsbury 1994: 41)[2]
“In the centre of the Garden. . . was a handsome bower, neatly built, & adorned with English Honey Suckle, Woodbine & a few Jessamine.”


  • Cuming, Fortescue, 1810, describing Canonsburgh, PA (quoted in Cummings 1949: 217, 227)[6]
“The most striking thing I saw here was my Landlord’s garden, which is both good and handsome, being laid out with taste, abounding in a variety of the best culinary vegetables, and having some very pleasant shady bowers, where the student, or man of leisure, sheltered from the noonday sun, and inhaling the fragrance of the surrounding aromatick [sic] plants might luxuriantly roam into the realms of fancy.”
“What adds to the beauty of Mr. Tannehill’s seat is, a handsome grove of about two acres of young black oaks, northwest of his dwelling, through the middle of which runs a long frame bowery, on whose end fronting the road, is seen this motto, ‘1808, Dedicated to Virtue, Liberty, and Independence’ Here a portion of the citizens meet on each 4th of July, to hail with joyful hearts the day that gave birth to the liberties and happiness of their country.”


  • Smith, Margaret Bayard, 1811, describing Sidney, summer retreat of Margaret Bayard Smith, near Washington, DC (1906: 88)[7]
“When Mr. Tracy, (who was an important personage on the occasion) brought the cart to the door Lytleton and all the boys jump’d in it and went to the woods for boughs. L. drove furiously along to the no small delight of the boys and soon return’d like the moving wood in Macbeth. The Piazza was soon transform’d into a bower, —every hand was busy, —Mrs. Clay, Mr. Smith and all.”


  • Wilson, Alexander, before 1813, describing Gray’s Garden, Philadelphia, PA (quoted in Adams 1976: 339)[8]
“There market-maids in lovely row,
With wallets white, were riding
home,
“And thund’ring gigs, with powdered
beaux,
Through Gray’s green festive
shade to roam.
“Sweet flows the Schuylkill’s winding
tide
By Bartram’s emblossomed
bowers.
“Where nature sports in all her pride
Of choicest plants and fruits and
flowers.”


  • Faux, William, 1819, describing the garden of Nathaniel Russell, Charleston, SC (quoted in Lounsbury 1994: 41)[2]
“[An English visitor in Charleston] called on the venerable Nathaniel Russell, Esq., residing in a splendid mansion, surrounded by a wilderness of flowers and bowers of myrtles, oranges and lemons, smothered with fruit and flowers.”


  • du Pont, Sophie Madeleine, 1828, describing Eleutherian Mills, estate of Eleuthère Irénée du Pont, near Wilmington, DE (quoted in Low and Hinsley 1987: 38)[9]
“I thought of other Maydays; long past, when you and I were little children—of our walks, and our plays—our bowers, mudhouses, and forts, and the little fleet of boats we used to sail upon the pond—I could not help feeling sad when I thought of how we were changed—we, that once played together, walked together, studied our little lessons in partnership.”


  • Wailes, Benjamin L. C., December 29, 1829, describing Lemon Hill, estate of Henry Pratt, Philadelphia, PA (quoted in Moore 1954: 359)[10]
“But the most enchanting prospect is towards the grand pleasure grove & green house of a Mr. Prat[t], a gentleman of fortune, and to this we next proceeded by a circutous rout [sic], passing in view of the fish ponds, bowers, rustic retreats, summer houses, fountains, grotto, &c., &c.”


  • Committee of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 1830, describing Lemon Hill, estate of Henry Pratt, Philadelphia, PA (quoted in Boyd 1929: 432)[11]
“There are some pretty bowers, summer houses, grottos and fish ponds in this garden—the latter well stored with gold and silver fish.”


“To those who mourn, what a consolation to visit the bower-sequestered monument of a much loved friend, under circumstances and with associations so favorably calculated to revive agreeable recollections of the past; and when those revolting ideas are excluded, which obtrude upon the mind, while standing in the usually dreary, desolate, and ruinous repositories of the dead.”


  • Hovey, C. M. (Charles Mason), September 1840, “Notes on Gardens and Gardening, in New Bedford, Mass.,” describing the residence of James Arnold, New Bedford, MA (Magazine of Horticulture 6: 364)[13]
“Continuing through the winding walks, shady bowers, and umbrageous retreats, through which rustic seats were placed, we arrived at the shell grotto.”


Fig. 5, William Bailey Lang, “Rustic Bower,” Views With Ground Plans, of the Highland Cottages at Roxbury, 1845.
  • Lang, William Bailey, 1845, describing a rustic bower in Butte, MA, in Views with Ground Plans (1845: 18)[14]
“The Rustic Bower.—Shingle roof, painted black. The corner post of the rough cedder, to which that hardy-plant, the Virginia creeper, has been trained.” [Fig. 5]


  • Earle, Pliny, January 1848, describing Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane, New York, NY (Journal of Medicine 10: 63)
Airing Courts, or Yards.—There are three of these courts for the men, and four for the women. They are, with one exception, well shaded with trees, and three of them have large bowers covered with roofs, and furnished with seats for all the patients admitted into the courts.”


“In the environs of New Bedford are many beautiful residences. Among these, we desire particularly to notice the residence of James Arnold, Esq. There is scarcely a small place in New England, where the pleasure-grounds are so full of variety, and in such perfect order and keeping, as at this charming spot; and its winding walks, open bits of lawn, shrubs and plants grouped on turf, shady bowers, and rustic seats, all most agreeably combined, render this a very interesting and instructive suburban seat.”


Citations

  • Johnson, Samuel, 1755, A Dictionary of the English Language (1755: 1:n.p.)[16]
BOWER. n. s. [from bough or branch, or from the verb to bow or bend.]
“1. An arbour; a sheltered place covered with green trees, twined and bent.”


“In some spacious pleasure-grounds various light ornamental buildings and erections are introduced, as ornaments to particular departments; such as temples, bowers, banquetting houses, alcoves, grottos, rural seats, cottages, fountains, obelisks, statues, and other edifices; these and the like are usually erected in the different parts, in openings between the divisions of the ground, and contiguous to the terminations of grand walks, &c.
“Some of these kinds of ornaments, however, being very expensive, are rather sparingly introduced; sometimes a temple is presented at the termination of a grand walk or opening, or sometimes a temple, banqueting-house, or bower is erected in the centre of some spacious opening or grass-ground in the internal divisions; other parts present alcoves, bowers, grottos, rural-seats, &c. at the termination of different walks.”


“6157. . . Light bowers formed of lattice-work, and covered with climbers, are in general most suitable to parterres; plain covered seats suit the general walks of the shrubbery.”


  • Prince, William, 1828, A Short Treatise on Horticulture (1828: 87, 88, 145–47, 149)[19]
Clematis virginica, or Virginian Virgin’s Bower.—This is of most rapid growth, and produces, in July and August, a great abundance of white flowers, which are very fragrant; it is well calculated to cover arbours and bowers. . .
Clematis viticella, or European Virgin’s Bower.—This is a native of the south of Europe, and is greatly admired as a vine for covering bowers, or training against the sides of houses, or in other situations where vines are wanted. . .
Sweetbriar, or Eglantine.—This delightful species of the rose family is well calculated to train against the sides of houses, or up the pillars of the piazza, or to intermingle with the vines which entwine bowers, &c. . .
“The Champney, Noisette, [rose] and most of the varieties, may be trained against the sides of houses, over bowers, &c. to a very considerable length, although not quite so rampant in their growth as the different varieties of the Multiflora. . .
“The climbing, or running roses, suitable to train against buildings, or on arbours, bowers, &c. are the following:—Common Multiflora, Roxburgh’s White Multiflora, Lady Banks’ Double White, Greville’s Superb, Champneys, Noisette, Boursaultian, Hybrid, Macartney’s, &c. . .”


  • Webster, Noah, 1828, An American Dictionary of the English Language (1828: 1:n.p.)[20]
BOW'ER, n. [Sax. bur, a chamber or private apartment, a hut, a cottage; W. bwr, an inclosure.]
“1. A shelter or covered place in a garden, made with boughs of trees bent and twined together. It differs from arbor in that it may be round or square, whereas an arbor is long and arched. Milton. Encyc.
“2. A bed-chamber; any room in a house except the hall. Spencer. Mason.
“3. A country seat; a cottage. Shenston., B. Johnson.
“4. A shady recess; a plantation for shade. W. Brown. . .
BOW’ERY, a. Covering; shading as a bower; also, containing bowers. Thomson.”


  • Teschemacher, James E., August 1, 1835, “Extracts from Foreign Publications” (Horticultural Register 1: 308–9)[21]
“From an article On the various form and character of Arbours as objects of use or ornament either in gardens or wild scenery [from Paxton’s Horticultural Register], we extract the following passages.
“‘A singularly beautiful structure which may be classed with this kind of garden decoration has been made in Ireland.
“‘A circular space of about sixty feet diameter, in the centre of dressed ground with scattered clumps of evergreen shrubs, surrounded by lofty trees, is wholly enclosed by a continued arcade of iron arches. . . All the arches are thickly covered with climbing plants of strong rapid growth, which proceed along the wires to the top of the pole. . .
“‘The interior is an arbor of great magnitude, not so closely covered as everywhere absolutely to exclude the sun, but yet so as to render it always shady and agreeable. . .
“‘The entire effect is good, and this may be considered as one of the best specimens of the artificial bower of the present day.’”


  • Johnson, George William, 1847, A Dictionary of Modern Gardening (1857: 98)[22]
BOWER. See Arbor.”


  • Downing, A. J., February 1848, “Hints and Designs for Rustic Buildings” (Horticulturist 2: 363–64)[23]
“But the more humble and simple cottage grounds, the rural walks of the ferme ornée, and the modest garden of the suburban amateur, have also their ornamental objects and rural buildings—in their place, as charming and spirited as the more artistical embellishments which surround the palladian villa.
“These are the seats, bowers, grottoes and arbors, of rustic work—than which nothing can be more easily and economically constructed, nor can add more to the rural or picturesque expression of the scene.
“Those simple buildings, often constructed only of a few logs and twisted limbs of trees, are in good keeping with the simplest or the grandest forms of nature.”


  • Elder, Walter, 1849, The Cottage Garden of America (1849: 219)[24]
“A. What place is that covered with roses and Honeysuckles?
“B. That’s a shady bower with seats in it.
“A. Is that another shady bower, covered with sweet scented clematis and roses?
“B. That’s a building for the use of the family.”


  • Miller, Lewis, c. 1850, description on a drawing of an idealized scene in the Orbis Pictus (Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Center, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation)
“While the fish, A narrow vista, carpeted with rich— green grass. invites my tread: here Showers light in golden dots. So blended, that the very air
Seems network as i enter there. On each Side Shrinks the bowery Shade: Before me Spreads an Emerald glade.” [See Fig. 3]

Images

Inscribed

Attributed


Notes

  1. This image may allude to feast grounds built by Shaker communities at mid-century. For more about Shaker imagery, see Sally M. Promey, Spiritual Spectacles: Vision and Image in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Shakerism (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993), view on Zotero.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Carl R. Lounsbury, ed., An Illustrated Glossary of Early Southern Architecture and Landscape (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), view on Zotero.
  3. Thomas Jefferson, The Garden Book, ed. by Edwin M. Betts (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1944), view on Zotero.
  4. William Parker Cutler, Life, Journals, and Correspondence of Rev. Manasseh Cutler, LL.D. (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1987), view on Zotero.
  5. Frederick Doveton Nichols and Ralph E. Griswold, Thomas Jefferson, Landscape Architect (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1978), view on Zotero.
  6. Richard O. Cummings, The American Ice Harvests: A Historical Study in Technology, 1800–1918 (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1949), view on Zotero.
  7. Margaret Bayard Smith, The First Forty Years of Washington Society, ed. Gaillard Hunt (New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1906), view on Zotero.
  8. William Howard Adams, ed., The Eye of Thomas Jefferson (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 1976), view on Zotero.
  9. Betty-Bright Low and Jacqueline Hinsley, Sophie du Pont, A Young Lady in America: Sketches, Diaries, & Letters, 1823–1833 (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1987), view on Zotero.
  10. John Hebron Moore, “A View of Philadelphia in 1829: Selections from the Journal of B. L. C. Wailes of Natchez,” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 78 (July 1954), 353–60, view on Zotero.
  11. James Boyd, A History of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 1827–1927 (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, 1929), view on Zotero.
  12. Thaddeus William Harris, A Discourse Delivered before the Massachusetts Horticultural Society on the Celebration of Its Fourth Anniversary, October 3, 1832 (Cambridge, MA: E. W. Metcalf, 1832), view on Zotero.
  13. Charles Mason Hovey, “Notes on Gardens and Gardening, in New Bedford, Mass.,” Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries and Improvements in Rural Affairs 6, no. 9 (September 1840): 361–66, view on Zotero.
  14. William Bailey Lang, Views with Ground Plans, of the Highlands Cottages at Roxbury (Boston: L. H. Bridgham and H. E. Felch, 1845), view on Zotero.
  15. A. J. [Andrew Jackson] Downing, A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening, Adapted to North America, 4th ed. (1849; repr. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1991), view on Zotero.
  16. Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the English Language: In Which the Words Are Deduced from the Originals and Illustrated in the Different Significations by Examples from the Best Writers, 2 vols. (London: W. Strahan for J. and P. Knapton, 1755), view on Zotero.
  17. Bernard M'Mahon, The American Gardener’s Calendar: Adapted to the Climates and Seasons of the United States. Containing a Complete Account of All the Work Necessary to Be Done. . . for Every Month of the Year. . . (Philadelphia: Printed by B. Graves for the author, 1806), view on Zotero.
  18. J. C. (John Claudius) Loudon, An Encyclopaedia of Gardening; Comprising the Theory and Practice of Horticulture, Floriculture, Arboriculture, and Landscape-Gardening, 4th ed. (London: Longman et al., 1826), view on Zotero.
  19. William Prince, A Short Treatise on Horticulture (New York: T. and J. Swords, 1828), view on Zotero.
  20. Noah Webster, An American Dictionary of the English Language, 2 vols. (New York: S. Converse, 1828), view on Zotero.
  21. James E. Teschemacher, “Extracts from Foreign Publications,” Horticultural Register, and Gardener’s Magazine 1 (August 1, 1835), 304–9, view on Zotero.
  22. George William Johnson, A Dictionary of Modern Gardening, ed. David Landreth (Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1847), view on Zotero.
  23. A. J. Downing, “Hints and Designs for Rustic Buildings,” Horticulturist and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste 2, no. 8 (February 1848): 363–65, view on Zotero.
  24. Walter Elder, The Cottage Garden of America (Philadelphia: Moss, 1849), view on Zotero.

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