Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England From the Conquest to the End O

Cover Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England From the Conquest to the End O
Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England From the Conquest to the End O
Thomas Hudson Turner
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, the Flemish, the Gascoyne, the English and the Black cherry. The foreign sorts ripened in May, the native not before June. It is extremely probable that the Gascoyne cherry was brought into this country soon after Gruienne became a dependency of the British crown, and our great mercantile intercourse with Flanders, from a very remote time, would naturally occasion the introduction of its fruits as well as its manufactures. The late Mr. London refers to one Richard Haines, fruiterer to Henry t...he Eighth, as the person supposed, by some, to have re-introduced the culture of the cherry in England. This opinion was derived from the " Epistle to the Reader, " prefixed to " The Husband- man's fruitfull Orchard ;" the name of the fruiterer was not Haines but Harris ; he was an Irishman, and planted an orchard, celebrated in the seventeenth century, at Teynham in Kent, a place famous long before for its vineyard, which bore the name of the "New-garden. " He is said to have fetched out of " Fraunce greate store of graftes especially pippins : before which time there was no right pippins in England.

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