"... in quiet old-world ... dwelt that master craftsman of s, , whose emblem of minute golden garb or wheatsheaf is searched for amidst the design of any modern church window that we admire. For many years he here applied his craft, leaving as a heritage that well-planned semblance of an Elizabethan house, complete in all its details, comprising a wondrous , a raised Garden Mount, a Wilderness, A Garden House of Entertainment, all those striking features in short which are alluded to in Bacon's Essay "Of Gardens.""
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Non-fiction authors from EnglandWomen authors from EnglandPeople from LondonEducators from EnglandWomen born in the 1870s
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Frances Garnet Wolseley, 2nd Viscountess Wolseley
(15 September 1872 – 24 December 1936) was an English author and teacher, as well as a local historian of . In 1902 in . she started the College for Lady Gardeners, which played an important pioneering role in gardening education for women in the UK.
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