Beth Chatto, OBE VMH

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Beth Chatto (Little), OBE VMH

Also Known As: "Betty Dianna Little"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Good Easter, Essex, England, United Kingdom
Death: May 13, 2018 (94)
Elmstead Market, Essex, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Daughter of William G Little and Bessie Beatrice Little
Wife of Andrew Edward Chatto
Mother of Private and Private
Sister of William S E Little and David J Little

Occupation: Plantswoman, garden designer, Author
Managed by: Terry Jackson (Switzer)
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Beth Chatto, OBE VMH

Beth Chatto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  • Beth Chatto
  • OBE VMH
  • Born 27 June 1923
  • Good Easter, Essex, UK
  • Died 13 May 2018
  • Elmstead Market, Essex, UK
  • Education Colchester Girls High School
  • Hockerill College
  • Occupation Plantswoman, garden designer, author
  • Known for Beth Chatto Gardens

Beth Chatto OBE VMH (27 June 1923 – 13 May 2018) was a British plantswoman, garden designer and author best known for creating the Beth Chatto Gardens near Elmstead Market in the English county of Essex. She was also known for writing several books on gardening for specific conditions. She lectured throughout the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia, the Netherlands and Germany. Her gardening and writing use the principle of the right plant for the right place, developed from her husband Andrew Chatto's lifelong research into the origin of garden plants.

Biography

Chatto was born at Good Easter, Essex, England, the daughter of Bessie (née Styles) and William Little, both enthusiastic gardeners. Named Betty Diana, she used the name Beth from her 20s onwards.[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. The couple lived in Braiswick, Colchester, where their two daughters, Diana and Mary, were born in 1946 and 1948. Andrew died in 1999.

The couple met Sir Cedric Morris, whose art school at Benton End in Hadleigh, Suffolk attracted artists, such as Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud, who would later become famous. Beth Chatto learned about plants from Morris, but was dismayed when he advised her that, in order to create a great garden, she would have to move house. From the late 1950s onwards Chatto had become involved in the Flower Club movement, lecturing, opening new clubs and demonstrating flower arranging. Members became an enthusiastic audience for unusual plants and a mail order business began from a small hand-typed sheet. From 1960, the Chattos worked on developing the Chatto Gardens and in 1967 the nursery was opened. In 1978 Chatto's first book The Dry Garden was published by J. M. Dent.

Chatto died peacefully, with her family by her side, at her home in Elmstead Market, near Colchester, on the evening of 13 May 2018. She was 94.

The Beth Chatto Gardens

Construction of the Beth Chatto Gardens, at Elmstead Market near Colchester, began in 1960 as a garden attached to the Chatto family home on land that had previously belonged to the Chatto family fruit farm. It had not been farmed as the soil was considered too dry in places, too wet in others and the whole area had been allowed to grow wild with blackthorn, willow and brambles. The only plants that survive from the earliest days are the ancient boundary oaks surrounding the Garden.

The Beth Chatto Gardens comprise a varied range of planting sites totalling 5 acres (2.0 ha), including dry, sun baked gravel, water and marginal planting, woodland, shady, heavy clay and alpine planting, and now include the Gravel Garden, Woodland Garden, Water Garden, Long Shady Walk, Reservoir Garden (currently undergoing development) and Scree Garden. It was the development of these sites that prompted Beth Chatto to write books on gardening with what could be considered as "problem areas" using plants that nature has developed to survive in differing conditions..

Beth Chatto lived in the white house in the midst of the gardens. She worked with her team on developing the Gardens and continued to inspect and approve their work until the day before she died. She contributed to articles for international and national press and appeared in international media.

Exhibitions

In January 1975 Chatto created a small winter garden at one of the Royal Horticultural Society Halls, London SW1. More exhibits followed and eventually the Beth Chatto Gardens "Unusual Plants" exhibition arrived at the Chelsea Flower Show. Exhibits by "Unusual Plants" were awarded ten consecutive Gold Medals at the Chelsea Flower Show from 1977 to 1987 (she did not exhibit in 1983). Exhibits by The Beth Chatto Gardens can still be seen at the Tendring Hundred Show in Essex.

List of publications

Beth Chatto was the author of many gardening books, including an exchange of letters with her friend and fellow gardener and writer Christopher Lloyd:

  • The Dry Garden. illustrated by Margaret Davies. J. M. Dent. 1978. ISBN 0-460-04317-X.
  • The Damp Garden. illustrated by Margaret Davies. J. M. Dent. 1982. ISBN 0-460-04551-2.
  • Plant Portraits. illustrated by Jill Coombs and Christine Grey-Wilson. J. M. Dent. 1985. ISBN 978-046-0-0460-08. (out of print)
  • The Beth Chatto Garden Notebook. Orion. 1988. ISBN 978-046-0-0473-57.
  • The Green Tapestry. photographs by Ron Sutherland and Steven Wooster. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. 1990. ISBN 978-067-1-6703-68. (out of print, rev. ed. Beth Chatto's Green Tapestry: Perennial Plants for Your Garden, London, England, HarperCollins, 1999)
  • Dear Friend and Gardener: letters exchanged between Beth Chatto and Christopher Lloyd. Frances Lincoln. 1998. ISBN 978-071-1-2122-75.
  • Beth Chatto's Gravel Garden. photographs by Steven Wooster. Frances Lincoln. 2000. ISBN 978-071-1-2142-55. (reprinted in 2016 as Drought-Resistant Planting)
  • Beth Chatto's Woodland Garden:Shade-Loving Plants for Year-Round Interest. photographs by Steven Wooster. Cassell. 2002. ISBN 978-030-4-3636-67.
  • The Damp Garden. photographs by Steven Wooster. Cassell. 2005. ISBN 978-184-4-0304-53.
  • Beth Chatto's Shade Garden. photographs by Steven Wooster. Pimpernel Press. 2017. ISBN 978-191-0-2582-24. (previously Beth Chatto's Woodland Garden, 2008)

Honours and awards

  • 1987: Awarded the Lawrence Memorial Medal[4]
  • 1987: Awarded the RHS Victoria Medal of Honour[4]
  • 1987: Awarded an honorary degree by the University of Essex[4]
  • 1995: Selected to the International Professional and Business Women's Hall of Fame for outstanding achievements in introducing plant ecology to garden design[4]
  • 1998: Presented with the Life Time Achievement Award by the Garden Writers Guild[4]
  • 2002: Appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Queen's Birthday Honours[4]
  • 2009: Awarded an honorary degree by the Anglia Ruskin University[4]
  • 2011: Named a Paul Harris Fellow by Colchester Trinity Rotary Club[4]
  • 2014: Awarded the Society of Garden Design's John Brookes Lifetime Achievement Award

Free BMD Birth:

Births Sep 1923 (>99%)

  • Little Bessie D Styles Chelmsford 4a 1180 Scan available - click to view

Free BMD Marriage:

  • Surname First name(s) Spouse District Vol Page
  • Marriages Sep 1943 (>99%)
  • Little Betty D Chatto Colchester 4a 1949 Scan available - click to view
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Beth Chatto, OBE VMH's Timeline

1923
June 27, 1923
Good Easter, Essex, England, United Kingdom
2018
May 13, 2018
Age 94
Elmstead Market, Essex, England, United Kingdom