Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Tropical vegetation in the Palm House
Information
Title
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Tropical vegetation in the Palm House
Record type
Ephemera
Original Reference
E/PC/MPG/2/K/2866
Author or creator
Unknown
Date
c.1925
Scope & content
Uncoloured postcard of the interior of a glasshouse at Royal Botanic Gardens Kew. The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew were formerly the grounds of Kew Palace, and developed as a botanic garden by the Earl of Bute, followed by Sir Joseph Banks; after a report compiled by John Lindley, Joseph Paxton, and John Wilson, they were officially designated the Royal Botanic Gardens, with Sir William Jackson Hooker as their first Director, in 1843. Sir William Chambers' orangery and rocky arch survive, along with various later temples; the major buildings created in the 1840s and after were the Palm House, the Victoria House, and the Temperate House. The rock garden was created in the 1880s