Everything about The Royal Horticultural Society totally explained
The
Royal Horticultural Society (
RHS) was founded in
1804 in
London,
England as the
Horticultural Society of London, and gained its present name in a
Royal Charter granted in
1861 by
Prince Albert. It is a
charity and exists to promote
gardening and
horticulture in
Britain and
Europe. This is done through a series of flower shows and through many model gardens that are open to the public. The society celebrated its
bicentenary in
2004.
RHS Gardens
The RHS has four flagship gardens in
England:
Wisley Garden, near the village of
Wisley in
Surrey;
Rosemoor in
Devon;
Hyde Hall in
Essex and
Harlow Carr in
North Yorkshire.
The society's first garden was in
Kensington, from 1818 – 1822. In 1821 the society leased part of the
Duke of Devonshire's estate at
Chiswick to set up an experimental garden; in 1823 it employed
Joseph Paxton there. From 1827 the society held
fetes at the Chiswick garden, and from 1833, shows with competitive classes for flowers and vegetables. In 1861 the RHS (as it had now become) developed a new garden at Kensington (the
Science Museum,
Imperial College and the
Royal College of Music now occupy the site), but it was vacated in 1888. The Chiswick garden was maintained until 1903 – 1904, by which time Sir
Thomas Hanbury had bought the garden at Wisley and presented it to the RHS.
RHS Garden Wisley is thus the society's oldest garden. Rosemoor came next, presented by Lady Anne Berry in 1988. Hyde Hall was given to the RHS in 1993 by its owners Dick and Helen Robinson. The most recent addition is Harlow Carr, acquired by the merger of the
Northern Horticultural Society with the RHS in 2001. It had been the Northern Horticultural Society's trial ground and display garden since they bought it in 1949.
RHS Flower Shows
The most famous RHS flower show is the annual
Chelsea Flower Show, but it also organizes several others: the London Flower Shows (currently eight a year), held at the Royal Horticultural Halls, close to the RHS headquarters in Vincent Square, Westminster, the annual
Hampton Court Palace Flower Show (which the RHS took over in 1993) and
Tatton Park Flower Show in
Cheshire (since 1999). It has held a Spring Flower Show in
Cardiff since 2005. The society is also closely involved with the spring and autumn shows at
Malvern, Worcestershire, and with BBC Gardeners' World Live held annually at the
Birmingham NEC.
Britain in Bloom
The RHS took over the administration of the
Britain in Bloom competition in 2002.
Medals and awards
The society honours certain persons with the
Victoria Medal of Honour who are deemed by its Council to be deserving of special recognition in the field of horticulture. Other medals issued by the society include the Banksian, Knightian and Lindley medals, named after notable early officers of the society. It awards Gold, Silver-gilt, Silver and Bronze medals to exhibitors at its Flower Shows.
RHS libraries
The RHS is custodian of the
Lindley Library, housed within its headquarters at 80 Vincent Square, London, and in branches at each of its four gardens. The library is based upon the book collection of
John Lindley.
Publications
Journals
The society has published a journal since 1866. Since 1975 it has been entitled
The Garden. The RHS also publishes
The Plantsman four times a year,
The Orchid Review six times a year, and
Hanburyana, an annual publication dedicated to horticultural
taxonomy.
Plant registers
Since the establishment of International Registration Authorities for plants in 1955 the RHS has acted as Registrar for certain groups of cultivated plants. It is now Registrar for nine categories – conifers, clematis, daffodils, dahlias, delphiniums, dianthus, lilies, orchids and rhododendrons. It publishes
The International Orchid Register
, the central listing of orchid hybrids.
History of the RHS
Founders
The creation of a British horticultural society was suggested by
John Wedgwood (son of
Josiah Wedgwood) in
1800. His aims were fairly modest: he wanted to hold regular meetings, allowing the society's members the opportunity to present papers on their horticultural activities and discoveries, to encourage discussion of them, and to publish the results. The society would also award prizes for gardening achievements.
He discussed the idea with his friends, but it was four years before the first meeting, of seven men, took place, on 7 March 1804 at
Hatchards bookshop in
Piccadilly, London. Wedgwood was chairman; also present were
William Townsend Aiton (successor to his father,
William Aiton, as Superintendent of
Kew Gardens), Sir
Joseph Banks (President of the
Royal Society),
James Dickson (a nurseryman),
William Forsyth (Superintendent of the gardens of
St. James's Palace and
Kensington Palace),
Charles Francis Greville (a
Lord of the Admiralty) and
Richard Anthony Salisbury, who was to become the Secretary of the new society.
Banks proposed his close friend
Thomas Andrew Knight for membership. The proposal was accepted, despite Knight's ongoing feud with William Forsyth over a plaster for healing tree wounds which Forsyth was developing. Knight soon became President of the society, and developed the society's aims and objectives to include a programme of practical research into fruit-breeding.
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