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A bed of cowslips flowering in the kitchen garden at Down House

English Heritage

English Heritage
United Kingdom

Down House, built in the early 18th century, was home to the great scientist Charles Darwin for 40 years until his death in 1882. After moving to the house in 1842, Darwin and his wife, Emma, remodelled the building and its extensive gardens many times. The garden was integral to family life. It provided a place of play and relaxation, a kitchen garden to grow food, and perhaps most famously a place for Darwin to experiment and test his scientific theories. It was here that Darwin developed his theory of evolution by natural selection and wrote his ground breaking work ‘On the Origin of Species’ (1859).

In the late 1850s Darwin took over part of the kitchen garden at Down for his experimental beds where he grew cowslips (pictured here) for research purposes.

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  • Title: A bed of cowslips flowering in the kitchen garden at Down House
  • Location: Down House
  • Type: Site
  • Original Source: DOWN HOUSE, ENGLISH HERITAGE
  • Rights: Historic England
English Heritage

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