TY - BOOK AU - Watt,Alistair AU - O'Brien,Seamus TI - Purdom and Farrer: plant hunters on the eaves of China SN - 9780646597867 AV - QK26 .W38 2019 PY - 2019/// CY - [Lavers Hill, Victoria] PB - Alistair Watt KW - Purdom, William, KW - Farrer, Reginald, KW - Plant collectors KW - China KW - Biography KW - Plant collecting KW - History KW - Gansu Sheng (China) KW - Description and travel N1 - "This edition is limited to 250 copies of which 210 are for sale."; Includes bibliographical references and index; Foreword by Seamus O'Brien -- Acknowledgements -- Map 1: Travels of William Purdom -- Map 2: Travels of Purdom and Farrer -- Introductioon -- Chapter 1. A gardeners's son. William Purdom -- Chapter 2. Purdom. First steps in China -- Chapter 3. Beyond Xi-an -- Chapter 4. Reginald Farrer. To the manor born -- Chapter 5. Purdom and Farrer -- Chapter 6. To the eaves of China -- Chapter 7. Beyond Thundercrown -- Chapter 8. To the stony mountains -- Chapter 9. In the land of the Lamas -- Chapter 10. Aftermath. Separate paths -- Chapter 11. Reginald Farrer in Burma -- Chapter 12. Legacies -- Appendix 1. Purdom seed and living plant collections 1909-1911 -- Appendix 2. Purdom and Farrer plant collections 1914-1916 -- Appendix 3. Bibliographic and documentary sources -- Notes and citations -- Index N2 - This book represents the first in depth biographical study of the life of the often forgotten plant hunter William Purdom. In doing so, it also explores the lives and work of two unusual men. Both born in 1880, the year of the death of Robert Fortune, they came from completely different social standings. Purdom was the eldest son of the head gardener of a property-owning businessman in the Lake District. Reginald Farrer, on the other hand, was the first scion of landed gentry who owned a huge estate in the Yorkshire Dales of England. Despite their vastly contrasting backgrounds, their common interest in alpine flowers brought them together in an expedition to hunt for new plants for British gardens on the mountain slopes where the eaves of China meet the roof of Tibet. In 1914, fate took them to the far-frontier walled Kansu city of Siku, and then in 1915, on to the mysterious abbey of the Buddhist Lamas of Tientang and Chebson. Both died young, Farrer on the rain-soaked border hills of Burma in 1920, Purdom in Peking a year later. However, in our gardens their legacy of beautiful plants, some bearing their names, will remain alive always ER -