Since its restoration in 2010 funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, Bushey Rose Garden has retained its Green Flag 'Heritage Site Accreditation' status.
History of Bushey Rose Garden
During the latter part of the 19th Century many notable artists lived in Bushey. From 1883 until 1904 the Rose Garden was the site of an Art School established by Sir Hubert von Herkomer RA, an eminent Victorian artist (1849-1914).
Herkomer had some 500-600 artists studying there before he eventually grew weary of the responsibility of overseeing the school. Lucy Kemp-Welsh, a former student of Herkomer's, opened her own art school - The Bushey School of Painting - on the same premises 'in 1905. Herkomer then re-purchased the school in 1912 and demolished it.
In 1912 Herkomer demolished the Art School and commissioned Thomas Mawson (1861-1933) to design a garden. Mawson noted his proposals on his first visit:
"The garden was to be separated from the kitchen garden by a brick-built pergola, with a handsome garden pavilion at one end. The centre of the panel rose garden was to be sunk two feet, with a fountain in the centre, and considerable spaces of ground were to be planted as foils against adjoining properties."
Many of the original features of the garden still remain such as the Sunken Garden, Summer House, Monument, Column and Pergola. The Cloister in the lawn area were the remnants of the Art School and were found by Three Valley Water at their depot in Clay Lane and re-erected in the garden in the mid-1990s. The garden was commissioned in exchange for a portrait by Herkomer. In Mawson's autobiography he wrote:
‘Herkomer remarked, "We have still to settle your fees, and I am going to make a suggestion which I hope you will accept. I think," he said, "you ought to have our portrait painted; my price for this would be six hundred guineas. Let's swop. I’ll do your portrait, whilst you design my rose garden, and we’ll call it quits."
Mawson later became the President of the Landscape Institute in 1929 and has left a legacy of parks and gardens in the UK and abroad.
The Bushey Urban District Council bought the garden in 1937 from the Herkomer estate and it was opened to the public in the same year.
During the late 1980s and early 1990s the Rose Garden, in common with many parks nationally, suffered from under-investment which lead to the deterioration of the fabric of the garden.
In 2002 the Rose Garden was registered as a Park and Garden of Special Historic Interest Grade II, but it had to be closed in December 2005 due to vandalism.
After successfully received funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund and Big Lottery Fund 'Parks for People' programme in 2008, the council restored the garden to its formally glory.
Work began in August 2009. Contractors Crispin & Borst worked with Land Use Consultants and architects Rees Bolter Associates to complete the garden restoration in June 2010.
The garden was officially opened on 23 July 2010 by the Lord Lieutenant, Countess of Verulam in front of 150 VIPs.