Gardening in towns and cities, now and then
The challenges we face in gardening in our towns and cities today are not dissimilar to those of Thomas Fairchild’s time, who lived 300 years ago. 86 percent of us now live in towns and cities, where flats are one of most common types of housing. More than half of all London’s housing stock is flats. These densely populated neighbourhoods mean fewer, smaller gardens with less access to natural light. Across the UK today, 1 in 8 households do not have access to a garden.
Our towns and cities also suffer from poor air quality. In Fairchild’s day the burning of sea coal was the biggest contributing factor to London’s poor air quality. Today, industry and vehicle emissions are the main contributors to urban air pollution levels that regularly exceed World Health Organisation limits.
How can we improve our lives with gardens in our towns and cities? Fairchild, arguably the first city gardener, had some answers.
Image: Sheet 1e of John Rocque’s map of London and Westminster, and the borough of Southwark, 1746. Credit: Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division.
Who was Thomas Fairchild?
Thomas Fairchild was a successful gardener who ran a nursery in Hoxton, then a London suburb dominated by market gardens. Fairchild’s nursery was popular with Londoners because of the exotic plants he grew, including one of the first banana trees grown in the UK.
Image: Portrait of Thomas Fairchild. Credit: Department of Plant Sciences; Public Catalogue Foundation.
Image: Portrait of Thomas Fairchild. Credit: Department of Plant Sciences; Public Catalogue Foundation.
Fairchild’s ideas on gardening were ahead of their time. He corresponded with Carl Linnæus, creator of our modern plant-naming system. He was also the first person to successfully create an artificial hybrid. His hybrid was a cross between a sweet William and a carnation pink – Dianthus caryophyllus L. x Dianthus barbatus L. (Caryophyllaceae) – and is better known to us as ‘Fairchild's Mule’ because it was sterile and could not reproduce.
Image: Title page of Fairchild’s The City Gardener, published in 1722. Credit: RHS Lindley Collections.
Image: Title page of Fairchild’s The City Gardener, published in 1722. Credit: RHS Lindley Collections.
In 1722 he published his book The City Gardener, in which he set out his ideas on the challenges of gardening in the city. Fairchild’s book shows us that he was well aware of the benefits of gardening in the city. Gardening improved the appearance of the city, encouraged wildlife, and aided mental wellbeing – all things that we continue to regard as important today.