Biddulph Grange
Biddulph Grange takes the visitor on a journey around the world from China to Egypt in a series of gardens connected by tunnels and subterranean passageways.
Biddulph Grange, the best-surviving Victorian garden in the country, takes the visitor on a whistlestop journey around the world from China to Egypt in a series of gardens connected by tunnels and subterranean passageways.
Biddulph was created at the height of the British Empire by James Bateman, the son of a wealthy industrialist. Bateman was fascinated by botany and the emerging technologies of the Victorian era, filling his garden with rare specimens tracked down by the Victorian plant hunters laid out to designs that purported to come from around the world but were actually inspired by the Great Exhibition and painted plates from the Potteries.
But Bateman's fascination for all things new would come into conflict with his deeply held religious beliefs, leading him into open conflict with Darwin, financial ruin and the eventual loss of his beloved garden.
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Clip
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A look around Biddulph Grange
Duration: 02:00
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Producer | Anthony Palmer |
Director | Anthony Palmer |
Executive Producer | Katie Buchanan |
Broadcasts
- Tue 22 Apr 2014 21:00
- Wed 23 Apr 2014 02:50
- Thu 24 Apr 2014 23:00
- Mon 29 Sep 2014 20:00
- Tue 30 Sep 2014 01:55
- Thu 2 Oct 2014 23:30
- Mon 19 Jan 2015 21:00
- Tue 20 Jan 2015 02:45
- Wed 5 Aug 2015 20:00
- Thu 6 Aug 2015 00:00
- Mon 10 Oct 2016 20:00
- Wed 11 Oct 2017 23:00