The Cover of Judith B. Tankard’s book ‘Gertrude Jekyll and the Country House Garden: From the Archives of Country Life.’

Gertrude Jekyll beside the terrace bridge at Deanery Garden.

Gertrude Jekyll’s home, Munstead Wood. Sir Edwin Lutyens designed the house to compliment Jekyll’s gardens, which were created first.

One of Jekyll’s iconic flower borders at Munstead Wood. (Image: Wikimedia Commons/Judithcomm, licensed under CC BY 2.0)

The garden at Munstead Wood in 1921, and today.

Jekyll’s design for Munstead Wood.

Hestercombe House in Somerset, England, one of Lutyens and Jekyll’s most famous collaborations.

The pergola at Hestercombe, lined with Jekyll’s signature flower borders.

Architectural details in the gardens at Hestercombe. (Photo: Robert Freidus/Victorianweb.org)

Architectural details in the gardens at Hestercombe.

A rill in one of the sunken gardens at Hestercombe.

The orangery at Hestercombe. (Photo: Robert Freidus/Victorianweb.org)

A classic ‘Lutyens garden bench’ in the gardens at Hestercombe. (Image: Tankard, Judith, ‘Gertrude Jekyll and the Country House Garden: From the Archives of Country Life,' Aurum Press, 2011)