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History of Early American Landscape Design

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Showing 20 pages using this property.
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Anonymous, Plan of a Flower Garden, 1840  +
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Michael van der Gucht, "Designs of Groves of a Middle Height," 1712  +
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J. C. Loudon, "Intricate and fanciful figures of parterres," 1826  +
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Rufus Porter, Landscape mural from Howe House, 1838  +
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John Durrand, Thomas Atkinson, n.d.  +
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Unknown, View of the Battery Looking North from the Churn, c. 1812  +
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Thomas Kelah Wharton, Washington's Monument, Baltimore, 1833  +
Thomas Coram, View of Mulberry, House and Street, c. 1800  +
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J. C. Loudon, "The fixed rafter-trellis," in An Encyclopaedia of Gardening; Comprising the Theory and Practice of Horticulture, Floriculture, Arboriculture, and Landscape-Gardening, including all the latest improvements; a general history of gardening in all countries; and a statistical view of its present state with suggestions for its future progress, in the British Isles (1826)  +
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Victor de Grailly, Mount Vernon, c. 1840-50  +
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Anonymous, "A pair of tozza [sic] vases, for a fountain," in A. J. Downing, ed., The Horticulturist and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste Devoted to Horticulture, Landscape, Gardening, Rural Architecture, Botany, Pomology, Entomology, Rural Economy, &c. 3, no. 1 (July 1848)  +
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David J. Kennedy, McAran's Garden, 1840  +
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Anonymous, Section of a small, low-cost, wood frame "green-house," Horticulturist, Vol. 6, No. 1 (January 1851)  +
Anonymous, "Villa at Brooklyn, N.Y., with the Conservatory attached," in [[A. J. Downing]], A Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening (1849)  +
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Batty Langley, One of two "Designs for Gardens that lye irregularly to the ground House . . . House opening to the North upon a plain Parterre of Grass," in New Principles of Gardening, or The laying out and planting parterres, groves, wildernesses, labyrinths, avenues, parks, &c. (1728)  +
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Charles Codman, Kalorama, c. 1820  +
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William Keenan, Plan of the City and Neck of Charleston, S.C., September 1844  +
William Dandridge Peck, Plan of the botanic garden of Mr. Curtis, Newbury, Mass., February 19, 1805  +
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James Smillie (artist), W. W. Rice (engraver), "Monument to Miss Charlotte Canda," in Nehemiah Cleaveland, The Rural Cemeteries of America. / Illustrated in a series of highly finished steel engravings from drawings taken on the spot, of the most picturesque scenery in Greenwood and Mount Auburn cemeteries; With descriptions by Nehemiah Cleaveland (1855 [1847])  +
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Anonymous, "Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane," in American Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge 1, no. 1 (September 1834)  +

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