Plaque

St John's Lodge Garden

Inscription

{Below a drawing which shows the layout of the garden:}
St John's Lodge was completed in 1819. The grounds had an informal layout until the 3rd Marquess of Bute purchased the lease in 1888. Lord Bute commissioned Robert Weir Shultz {sic} to carry out works to the villa and grounds including making "a garden fit for meditation".

Weir Shultz arranged distinctly shaped spaces on the axis of the villa. Formed by hedges, these enclosures remain the framework for the garden. He extended the villa forecourt into a sunken lawn, with large rusticated stone piers at the corners (boys on each support Bute family coats of arms) and scalloped hedges along the edges. The lawn led up steps to a circular garden of mixed borders and a central statue of St John the Baptist. An oval tennis lawn beyond, was reached through a large stone loggia of classical design. The axis terminated at a nymphaeum; a semi-domed temple within a tight circle of lime trees. Garden features reflected both Arts and Crafts ideas and the late nineteenth-century revival of classical art.

To the south were kitchen and rose gardens, paddocks, and to the north side a gravel walk. These and the stone loggia and nymphaeum were lost during a decline between the wars. The central statue was replaced by "Hylas and the Nymph" and the "Shepherdess" statue was introduced. The villa and outbuildings were used as a hospital for disabled officers, St Dunstan's Institute for the Blind, and eventually the garden became public in 1928. Despite changes, the garden core retains the quiet reflective mood intended by Lord Bute.

In 1994, the Royal Parks undertook works to strengthen and enhance the character of the garden and accommodate a new axis walk brought about by change of use for St John's Lodge. Elements of the original concept have been re-introduced; there is a new gravel walk with a circle of lime trees around a stone urn at one end and the "Shepherdess" at the other. New planting throughout increases seasonal interest and variety, and clipped yew hedges replace old privet. A pergola with climbers takes the place of the lost loggia, and a covered seat forms the focal point to the axis where the nymphaeum once stood.

Site: St John's Lodge Garden (1 memorial)

NW1, Inner Circle, Regent's Park, St John's Lodge Garden

The plaque is just inside the gates. Fitzrovia News has some lovely photographs of the garden. See Blind Veterans UK for information about the house, St John's Lodge, and its use by the St Dunstan's Hostel for Blinded Soldiers and Sailors.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
St John's Lodge Garden

Subjects commemorated i

Blind Veterans UK

This charity was founded at the start of WW1 by Arthur Pearson, the newspaper...

Read More

John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute

Landed aristocrat, industrial magnate, antiquarian, scholar, philanthropist, ...

Read More

Robert Weir Schultz

Scottish Arts and Crafts architect, artist, landscape designer and furniture ...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Bowler plaque - Silk Design (A)

Bowler plaque - Silk Design (A)

E1, Fournier Street

The plaque shows a detail from a design for the silk fabric produced in Spitalfields. We believe the design shows a pomegranate in the Ja...

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
St Paul's School

St Paul's School

EC4, New Change

The Corporation of the City of London Near this spot from 1512 until 1884 stood St Paul's School, founded by Dean Colet.

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Lord Eldon

Lord Eldon

WC1, Bedford Square, 6

London County Council Lord Eldon, 1751 - 1838, Lord Chancellor, lived here.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Battersea Park bandstand

Battersea Park bandstand

SW11, Battersea Park

It's always worth checking the central point in the floor of a bandstand.  This plaque is not too interesting but we found Lord William R...

1 subject commemorated, 5 creators
Thames Tunnel Mill

Thames Tunnel Mill

SE16, Rotherhithe Street, Thames Tunnel Mills

Thames Tunnel Mill This is a listed mid 19th century former mill building and warehouse. It is one of the earliest warehouse residential ...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator