Geoff Hamilton Cottage Garden

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Geoffrey Stephen Hamilton(15 August 1936 – 4 August 1996) was an English gardener, broadcaster and author, best known as presenter of BBC television's Gardeners' World in the 1980s and 1990s.[1]

Buy Geoff Hamilton's Cottage Gardens 1st by Geoff Hamilton (ISBN: 851) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Gardening series delving into the history of cottage gardening, Looks to the old cottage gardens of the past and adapts the more popular features to modern gardens. In building three cottage gardens from scratch at his home in Barnsdale, Geoff Hamilton set out to simplify the practical problems of creating a natural rustic look.

Background[edit]

Bust of Geoff Hamilton at his garden, Barnsdale Gardens, Rutland

Hamilton was born just a few minutes before his twin brother Tony, in Stepney, London. His family moved to Broxbourne in Hertfordshire when he was two, and his interest in horticulture was nurtured initially by working on the family's back garden. He expanded his knowledge still further by helping out at local nurseries during the school holidays – mainly at the Van Hage Nursery at the end of his road. He went on to Writtle Agricultural College in Essex where, in 1959, he passed the National Diploma in Horticulture with distinction.

After graduating from agricultural college he became a nurseryman and self-employed landscape gardener, then opened his own garden centre ('The Hamilton Garden Centre') on the outskirts of Kettering in Northamptonshire.[1] He began writing a column for Garden News in 1970, and in 1975 became a full-time journalist when he took over as editor of Practical Gardening magazine, where he began his crusade to inform everybody about the joys and benefits of organic gardening.

Television and Barnsdale[edit]

Hamilton got his first break into television in 1970 presenting Gardening Diary for Anglia TV which led to guest appearances on BBC1's Gardeners' World. From 1979 until his death, he was the show's regular, and longest-serving presenter, and, in 1985, was responsible for moving the show's venue to his own garden at Barnsdale, Rutland. He was also the creator of several other BBC television gardening series such as The Cottage Garden, The Paradise Garden and The Ornamental Kitchen Garden. Hamilton wrote or co-wrote a number of books to accompany his television series (see below).

His practical hands-on experience, down-to-earth, cost-saving approach to gardening, his desire to share his failures as well as successes with the audience, combined with a gentle humour were some of the keys to his success and popularity. He was a committed and informed early advocate of the organic approach to gardening, helping to dispel the rather widely held belief that organic gardening was slightly odd and 'cranky.'

Readers of Amateur Gardening magazine nominated Hamilton as Gardener of the Millennium.[2] It has remained a puzzle to many in the gardening world that despite his achievements and popularity, he received neither award nor recognition from the Royal Horticultural Society. He was, however, awarded an honorary Master of Science Degree by Anglia Polytechnic University in 1994.

Garden

Death and legacy[edit]

Hamilton suffered a heart attack in 1995, and took three months off work to recuperate.[3] He died after suffering a heart attack on a charity bike ride near Merthyr Tydfil, Wales, in August 1996.

His garden at Barnsdale, consisting of 38 themed gardens over 8 acres (3.2 ha), remains open to the public and is run by his son Nick Hamilton (also an organic gardener and writer). A charity, Geoff Hamilton's New Gardeners' Foundation, was set up to provide a bursary of £4,000 for students of any age and level studying practical horticulture at Writtle College.[4] This award is funded by donations and sales of gardening DVDs.

References[edit]

  1. ^ abGeoff Hamilton – a gardening legendArchived 30 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^BBC News Geoff tops garden gurus (accessed 24 November 2006).
  3. ^Obituary, The Independent
  4. ^Writtle College.

Bibliography[edit]

Geoff Hamilton's Cottage Gardens Tv

Written or co-authored by Hamilton
  • Do Your Own Garden Stonework (W Foulsham & Company Limited, 1986).
  • The Living Garden (BBC books, 1992).
  • Geoff Hamilton's Cottage Gardens (BBC books, 1995).
  • The Ornamental Kitchen Garden (BBC books, 1995).
  • Search, Gay. Old Garden, New Gardener (BBC books, 1995)
  • Search, Gay. The Complete First Time Gardener (BBC books, 1996)
  • Geoff Hamilton's Paradise Gardens (BBC books, 1997).
  • Clevely, A & Hamilton, L. Geoff Hamilton's Year in Your Garden (Headline Book Publishing, 1998)
  • 'Gardeners' World' Practical Gardening Course (BBC books, 2000).
  • Organic Gardening (Dorling Kindersley, 2008).
Geoff Hamilton Cottage Garden
About Hamilton
  • Search, Gay & Hamilton, Tony. Geoff Hamilton: A Man and His Garden' (BBC books, 1998).
  • Hamilton, Tony. My Brother Geoff: The People's Gardener (Headline Book publishing, 2001)
  • Hamilton, Nick & Sue. Geoff Hamilton: A Gardening Legend (2006).

External links[edit]

  • Obituary (The Independent, 6 August 1996)
  • Geoff Hamilton at Find a Grave
  • Geoff Hamilton biog (Barnsdale gardens)
  • Geoff Hamilton – an 'English rose' by David C.H. Austin

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Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Geoff_Hamilton&oldid=891496127'

Although garden experts inhabit a less venal corner of the media world than many other specialists, the stars who command regular television spots are greatly envied by the ruck of the profession. Yet nobody begrudged Geoff Hamilton his success as presenter of BBC2's Gardeners' World because he was so patently pre-eminent in the role he had filled since 1979. Easily the most popular of modern television gardeners, his death, eight days before his 60th birthday, leaves a void in the lives of 3 million viewers who tune in to the programme on BBC2 every Friday evening.

His passion for gardening and his impressive depth of knowledge were conveyed in a relaxed and affable manner that inspired confidence in experts and novices alike. When he had his first heart attack last year, thousands of viewers sent him flowers and get-well greetings. Over the years, many presenters tried to copy his style but never achieved the right balance. It is hard to be matey without seeming to patronise; to celebrate floral beauty without being precious; to play the countryman without tipping into the character of the country bumpkin, as some of his predecessors and contemporaries had done.

In fact, he was not a countryman at all, being perversely proud of his origins in Stepney, east London, where he was born one of twins. When he was two, the family moved to rural Hertfordshire, where he soon developed an interest in gardening, taking part-time work in a local nursery while still at school.

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After graduating from agricultural college he became a nurseryman and landscape gardener, and began writing a column for Garden News in 1970. Five years later he took up journalism full-time and became editor of Practical Gardening.

His colleagues in the media liked him because it was impossible not to: he was invariably friendly, helpful and, on screen, utterly professional. In 1991, when the BBC put Gardeners' World out to an independent producer, there was never a doubt that Hamilton would stay as its main presenter. Tony Laryea, whose company, Catalyst, was awarded the contract to produce the show and who is now its executive producer, said: 'Geoff had a genuine love of gardening: it came out of every pore, and he was able to communicate it effectively because he was an ordinary bloke. He wasn't pretentious. He had a no- nonsense approach and an authority that came through his knowledge. You saw it and you believed it.

'New people on the programme were amazed when they saw him in front of the camera. It all came so naturally to him. If something hadn't worked he could tell straight away and he would do it again, getting it exactly right. He also had a marvellous sense of humour.'

Last Friday, two days before he died, Hamilton was busy filming segments for this week's edition of Gardeners' World. He had simultaneously been working on a new series called Hidden Gardens, due to be screened next January. It was to be a follow-up to last winter's highly successful Cottage Gardens: his book accompanying that series was on the best-seller list for months.

On this week's Gardeners' World he had been due to guide viewers on a tour of his large garden at Barnsdale in Rutland, partly financed by the BBC. It was also his home, where he lived with his second wife Lynda. Although the public are seldom allowed into Barnsdale it is one of the most famous gardens in the country because Hamilton's demonstrations of gardening techniques were filmed there. It is made up of several distinct garden areas, many constructed in front of the cameras for the benefit of viewers.

He seemed less comfortable when presenting the programme from other people's gardens and being forced to enthuse over aspects that he may not necessarily have liked. He was happiest on his own patch explaining practicalities, wielding the spade or hoe or getting his hands and knees dirty. With such a wide audience it was inevitable that his ideas should influence horticultural fashion: for instance, his habit of mixing vegetables and flowers in the same border is increasingly imitated.

Gardening is a big-money leisure industry but Hamilton was not a reliable friend of business interests. Knowing that many of his viewers were pensioners, with little money to spare, he directed much of his advice towards saving costs. Why use purpose-made flower pots when you can recycle yoghurt containers? Or buy an expensive cloche when you can make one yourself for a few pounds? His penchant for low-cost improvisation, allied to his perpetual air of boyish innocence, sometimes made the programme feel like a grown-up version of Blue Peter.

His millions of fans did not include the makers of fertilisers and pesticides. He was an organic gardener, eschewing chemicals and passionately opposing the use of peat in potting composts because extracting it from the earth can endanger natural habitats. Although never cranky or obsessive about ecology he was one of the first New Age gardeners, politically correct before the phrase became fashionable. As such he was in sharp contrast to Percy Thrower, the first presenter of Gardeners' World, summarily fired from the programme in 1975 for the sin of making television commercials for garden chemicals.

A widely known gardening expert has numerous calls on his time: not just the on-screen work, but newspaper and magazine articles, books and endless personal appearances. Some of Hamilton's friends think it was his reluctance to turn down such engagements, as well as having to find the time to do his own gardening, that contributed to last year's heart attack.

Hamilton Farm Cottages

He was off the air for three months while he recuperated, and on his doctor's orders lost weight and took more exercise, including cycling. The fatal attack occurred while he was on a charity bike ride at the weekend, doing his bit for a good cause while trying to keep fit.

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Michael Leapman

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Geoff Hamilton, journalist, broadcaster and gardener: born London 12 August 1936; twice married (three sons); died near Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorgan 4 August 1996.