Lawrence Johnston

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Major Lawrence Waterbury Johnston (1871–1958) was a British soldier and garden creator.

Johnston was born in Paris, France, into a family of wealthy American stockbrokers from Baltimore. He went to England to study at Cambridge University. Soon after his graduation, he became a naturalised Englishman. He joined the British Army and served in the Second Boer War and World War I with the Northumberland Hussars, being commissioned in 1901 and reaching the rank of Major.

He travelled extensively and was interested in the arts. Johnston is remembered today for the garden he created: Hidcote Manor Garden, now in the care of the National Trust. He and his mother, Gertrude Winthrop, bought Hidcote Manor in 1907, and he started a programme of 40 years' work on the garden. An enthusiastic plant collector, he sponsored and undertook several expeditions in Europe, Asia, Africa and South America to bring back rare specimens.

After bequeathing his estate to the National Trust, Johnston moved to France in 1948, and was working on another garden at Serre de la Madone, Menton, at the time of his death in 1958.

A rose — the bright yellow semi-double climber "Lawrence Johnston" — bears his name.

British Army personnel stub This biographical article related to the British Army is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.