Nature In London
Contributing Photographer Lucinda Douglas Menzies kindly gave me a copy of LONDON’S NATURAL HISTORY by R S R Fitter published in 1945, in which I discovered this splendid gallery of colour plates by Eric Hosking and other distinguished photographers of the day.
Feeding the pelicans at St James’s Park (Eric Hosking)
Backyard pig farming (Eric Hosking)
Coldharbour Farm, Mottingham – the last farm in London (Eric Hosking)
Feeding the pigeons in front of St Paul’s Cathedral (Wolfgang Suschitzky)
The New River & North-East Reservoir at Stoke Newington (Eric Hosking)
The nearest rookery to London, at Lee Green SE12 (Eric Hosking)
Allotments on Barking Levels (Eric Hosking)
Sand martin colony in a disused sand pit near Barnet bypass (Eric Hosking)
The Upper Pool at sunset with London Bridge in the background (Eric Hosking)
River wall at the confluence of the Ingrebourne with the Thames at Rainham (Eric Hosking)
Cabbage attacked by caterpillars (P L Emery)
A magnolia in the grounds of Kenwood House (Eric Hosking)
The Thames at Hammersmith with mute swans (Eric Hosking)
Sheep grazing at Kenwood House (Eric Hosking)
Teddington Lock (Eric Hosking)
A plum orchard near Chelsfield, Kent (Eric Hosking)
A black-headed gull feeding in St James’s Park (Eric Hosking)
A bold red deer at Richmond Park (C E Maney)
South-African grey-headed sheld duck, pair of mallard and a coot in St James’s Park (Eric Hosking)
Mute swans nesting on the River Lea, Hertingford, Herts (Eric Hosking)
Crocuses at Hyde Park Corner (Eric Hosking)
Roses in Queen Mary’s Garden, Regent’s Park (Wolfgang Suschitzky)
Anglers on the River Lea near Broxbourne, Herts (Eric Hosking)
Almond blossom in a suburban front garden, Ruislip, Middlesex (Eric Hosking)
Pear Tree in Blossom, Crouch End (Eric Hosking)
Rosebay willow herb and Canadian fleabane in a ruined City church (Eric Hosking)
Coltsfoot on a blitzed site (Eric Hosking)
Berkeley Sq plane trees (L Dudley Stamp)
Cress beds at Fetcham, Surrey (Eric Hosking)
Glasshouses in the Lea Valley (Eric Hosking)
Hainault Forest, Essex, from Dog Kennel Hill. The whole of this area was ploughed up a century ago (Eric Hosking)
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My father bought a copy, when it first came out ..
As far as I ‘m concerned, we have “always” had a copy.
I think I’ve got a full set of the “New Naturalists” – they are still coming out, once or twice a year …
Beautifully captured natural peaceful idylls, which resemble paintings – quite therapeutic to gaze into & unwind in these hi-tech times..
Those photographs are like paintings
1945 — a time of new beginnings. These pictures show this from the perspective of nature. Wonderful!
Love & Peace
ACHIM
My father was born in West Ham in 1907, he would have recognised some of the early pictures. Both parents would have recognised the rest. It is a pity man is so rapacious.
I live not far from Mottingham and Lee Green.
In Mottingham we still have Court Farm Road.
Good to see pictures.
Painterly and exquisite.