Date 14thMay 2018
Beth Chatto OBE VMH dies
It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Beth Chatto OBE VMH, the acclaimed gardener, writer and plantswoman.
Beth Chatto, who was born on 27 June 1923, died peacefully at home with her family by her side, on the evening of 13thMay 2018, aged 94. There will be a private funeral with a memorial service to follow.
In a gardening career spanning six decades, Beth Chatto’s many awards included ten successive Gold Medals at RHS Chelsea, the RHS’s highest award, the Victoria Medal of Honour, and the RHS Lawrence Medal both in 1987, the Lifetime Achievement Award in 1998 from the Garden Writers Guild (now the Garden Media Guild), and two honorary doctorates, from Essex University in 1987, and from Anglia Ruskin University in 2009.
In 2002, Beth Chatto was awarded the OBE in the Queen’s Birthday honours, and her most recent honour came in 2014 when she received The John Brookes Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Garden Designers.
Beth’s spirit will live on in the gardens and her gardening ethos will continue through the work of the Beth Chatto Education Trust, established to inspire the next generation of gardeners.
She leaves behind her two daughters, five grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
More about Beth:
Beth Chatto was born on 27 June 1923 in Good Easter, Essex. She attended Colchester Girls’ High School and trained to be a teacher at Hockerill College, Bishop’s Stortford from 1940 to 1943.
In the early 1940s, she met fruit farmer, Andrew Chatto. Their shared love of plants brought them together and they married in 1943. They lived in Braiswick, Colchester, where their two daughters, Diana and Mary, were born in 1946 and 1948. Andrew died in 1999.
In the early 1950s, a close neighbour, Mrs Pamela Underwood, who ran a nursery, encouraged her to become involved with flower arranging. They both became founder members of the Colchester Flower Club, the second flower club in Britain.
Around the same time, the Chattos met Sir Cedric Morris, whose art school at Benton End, Nr Hadleigh, Suffolk, attracted later to be famous names such as Francis Bacon and Lucien Freud. She learned about plants from Morris but was dismayed when he advised her that to create a great garden she would have to move.
By the late 1950s, she persuaded her husband to build a house on part of his fruit farm at Elmstead Market. The site, with its slope from dry gravelly soil to a boggy, stream-fed ditch gave her the combination of conditions on which to create what has become one of the most famous and loved gardens in the world.
In 1967, she opened a small nursery called ‘Unusual Plants’. Although she claimed never to have coined the phrase ‘right plant, right place’, this was always the abiding tenet of her planting philosophy. The gardens and nursery soon became a place of pilgrimage for keen gardeners.
In early 1975, she was persuaded to enter a small selection of plants at a Royal Horticultural Society show in London, dug up from the garden. Unknown to her at the time, one of the judges wanted to have her exhibit disqualified as he felt her native plants rather than cultivars were no more than ‘weeds’. The other judges disagreed and she was awarded an RHS Flora Silver Medal.
Her first exhibit at the RHS’s Chelsea Flower Show in 1976 won a Flora Silver Gilt medal, but the following year came the first of ten successive Chelsea Gold Medals. Her stand was unique at the time with its display of plants for dry and damp areas as they would be seen growing in contrast to the traditional Chelsea displays with plants shown in visible black pots.
In 1978, she wrote her first book, The Dry Garden, and in 1982 The Damp Garden. These were followed by Plant Portraits (1985), Beth Chatto’s Notebook (1988), and The Green Tapestry (1989). In 1998, she collaborated with her close friend, Christopher Lloyd in Dear Friend and Gardener. This was followed by Beth Chatto’s Gravel Garden(2000), and Beth Chatto’s Woodland Garden (2002). The Gravel Garden, on the site of the old car park, was to become her most famous achievement displaying plants carefully chosen to cope with ultra-dry conditions which have never been watered other than by light Essex rainfall.
Among the many awards bestowed on her, she was enormously proud to receive in the same year, 1987, the RHS’s highest honour, the Victoria Medal of Honour as well as their Lawrence Medal for the best display at Chelsea. She was given two honorary doctorates, one from Essex University in 1988, and from Anglia Ruskin University in 2009. Among many other awards, she received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Garden Writers’ Guild (now the Garden Media Guild) in 1998, the Order of the British Empire medal (OBE) in 2002, and The John Brookes Lifetime Achievement Award by the Society of Garden Designers in 2009.
The garden and nursery continue to thrive under the direction of Beth’s granddaughter, Julia Boulton. The Beth Chatto Education Trust was established in 2015 to promote her beliefs and give practical advice to future generations of young gardeners.
gardening, per se, was not on the agenda in my world.
I read a piece in the Observer about Beth Chatto's unusual plants - and realising we were in the same neck of the woods, wasted no time in making her acquaintance.
Literally, a life changing encounter; I was immediately hooked.
From her books and catalogues, with their liberal descriptions and juicy adjectives, coupled with countless visits to Beth's garden and nursery, I could study plants in mesmerising detail. A comprehensive introduction and education in to a very special horticultural world.
I soon discovered her mentor Graham Stuart Thomas, and, through Beth's introduction was invited to meet him at his home in Woking.
When my advertising career, after almost 30 years, began to pall - I became a garden designer.
Very quickly gathering momentum, I found myself producing roof gardens, atriums, courtyards and gardens, for film companies, advertising agencies and private clients throughout central London and further afield.
More recently, I moved to rural Devon. For the past 12 years I have been working within a hidden valley.
to create a Himalayan style utopian garden, with many unusual and salient features - an old gorge-like railway cutting with high, cliff- like banks; filled with tree ferns, rare bamboos et all.
So, although Beth never knew the fullness and richness of her influence on my life, I felt it was appropriate,
to at last say ..."Thank you".
We open for the NGS today [ we do so every 2 years]. I feel Beth can take a share in the achievement.......many of the plants purchased from her nursery have been propagated on and are for sale here to raise money for the NGS charities.
Thank you.
She will be remembered and missed by many.
Our condolences to her family.
I enjoyed her short video at Lambeth palace garden, I have seen it again & again as she is my favourite designer, plants women & kind lady. Please accept my condolences on your great loss. Suha Aranki