Regent's Park. The Hot-house, Royal Botanic Gardens
Information
Title
Regent's Park. The Hot-house, Royal Botanic Gardens
Record type
Ephemera
Original Reference
E/PC/MPG/2/R/3082
Author or creator
Unknown
Date
15 Jul 1907
Scope & content
Coloured postcard of the glasshouse range in the Royal Botanic Society's Gardens in Regent's Park. Ink: Thank you for the box of very pretty flowers you have sent. They have all revived & are fresh and sweet. Miss M & I are so fond of country flowers. those flowers we buy in London do not smell half so sweet. I hope you and Hetty are well Yrs S S [address in Ipswich supplied]. Regent's Park was originally intended to be the grounds of an estate created by John Nash for the Prince Regent, but by the time work was underway the Prince Regent had taken Buckingham House as his residence. Regent's Park was opened to the public in the 1830s. The inner circle was from 1840 to 1930 the site of the Royal Botanic Society's garden, designed by Robert Marnock; after that society folded, it was developed by Duncan Campbell as Queen Mary's Rose Garden. At the north end of the park is the London Zoo, laid out by Decimus Burton for the Zoological Society of London in the 1820s, and opened to the public in 1847