From Yard to Garden: The Domestication of America's Home Grounds

The garden means more to Americans than simply the plants it contains: It is a gathering place, a retreat from the demands of daily life, and an extension of the family home. The history of the American home garden is fundamentally intertwined with our national culture and character, and Christopher Grampp reveals this fascinating story through engaging text and numerous images.

            In the early 1800s, Americans employed their home grounds for agriculture, sustenance, and domestic activities.  Grampp takes this as the starting point for his narrative, from which he tracks the evolution of the American front and back yards as the nation evolved from an agrarian to an industrial economy. He connects the emergence of the modern home garden to the rise of suburbanization, the growth of city services and the post–World War II baby boom, which established the single-family home and its grounds as the ideal American dwelling. From Yard to Garden argues that the home garden is best understood as an expression of “habitability,” or the ways in which Americans have collectively and individually transformed their home grounds into functional outdoor living areas. Grampp analyzes the gardens of California homes as quintessential examples, revealing that the mild climate, demographics, land costs, and media influences of the region have led many California homeowners to create beautiful outdoor family rooms.

            A captivating and vibrantly illustrated study, From Yard to Garden digs up the broader historical reasons why we seek to create personal Edens in our own yards.
 

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From Yard to Garden: The Domestication of America's Home Grounds

The garden means more to Americans than simply the plants it contains: It is a gathering place, a retreat from the demands of daily life, and an extension of the family home. The history of the American home garden is fundamentally intertwined with our national culture and character, and Christopher Grampp reveals this fascinating story through engaging text and numerous images.

            In the early 1800s, Americans employed their home grounds for agriculture, sustenance, and domestic activities.  Grampp takes this as the starting point for his narrative, from which he tracks the evolution of the American front and back yards as the nation evolved from an agrarian to an industrial economy. He connects the emergence of the modern home garden to the rise of suburbanization, the growth of city services and the post–World War II baby boom, which established the single-family home and its grounds as the ideal American dwelling. From Yard to Garden argues that the home garden is best understood as an expression of “habitability,” or the ways in which Americans have collectively and individually transformed their home grounds into functional outdoor living areas. Grampp analyzes the gardens of California homes as quintessential examples, revealing that the mild climate, demographics, land costs, and media influences of the region have led many California homeowners to create beautiful outdoor family rooms.

            A captivating and vibrantly illustrated study, From Yard to Garden digs up the broader historical reasons why we seek to create personal Edens in our own yards.
 

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From Yard to Garden: The Domestication of America's Home Grounds

From Yard to Garden: The Domestication of America's Home Grounds

by Christopher Grampp
From Yard to Garden: The Domestication of America's Home Grounds

From Yard to Garden: The Domestication of America's Home Grounds

by Christopher Grampp

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

The garden means more to Americans than simply the plants it contains: It is a gathering place, a retreat from the demands of daily life, and an extension of the family home. The history of the American home garden is fundamentally intertwined with our national culture and character, and Christopher Grampp reveals this fascinating story through engaging text and numerous images.

            In the early 1800s, Americans employed their home grounds for agriculture, sustenance, and domestic activities.  Grampp takes this as the starting point for his narrative, from which he tracks the evolution of the American front and back yards as the nation evolved from an agrarian to an industrial economy. He connects the emergence of the modern home garden to the rise of suburbanization, the growth of city services and the post–World War II baby boom, which established the single-family home and its grounds as the ideal American dwelling. From Yard to Garden argues that the home garden is best understood as an expression of “habitability,” or the ways in which Americans have collectively and individually transformed their home grounds into functional outdoor living areas. Grampp analyzes the gardens of California homes as quintessential examples, revealing that the mild climate, demographics, land costs, and media influences of the region have led many California homeowners to create beautiful outdoor family rooms.

            A captivating and vibrantly illustrated study, From Yard to Garden digs up the broader historical reasons why we seek to create personal Edens in our own yards.
 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781930066748
Publisher: Columbia College Chicago Press
Publication date: 05/18/2008
Series: Center for American Places - Center Books on American Places
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Christopher Grampp is a registered landscape architect in California and teaches in the Department of Landscape Horticulture at Merritt College. His writings about residential gardens have appeared in Landscape magazine and the book The Meaning of Gardens.
 

Table of Contents

Part One: American Yard

Chapter One: From Dooryard to Urban Yard

Chapter Two: The Front Yard Beautiful

Chapter Three: The Back Yard Sanctified

Chapter Four: The Modern Yard Emerges

Chapter Five: A Back Yard Family Room

Chapter Six: The Suburban Yard Under Fire

Part Two: California Garden

Chapter Seven: California and the Inside-Out House

Chapter Eight: Sunset Magazine and the Outdoor Room

Chapter Nine: A Private World

Chapter Ten: Garden or Desert?

Part Three: Outlook for America’s Home Grounds

Chapter Eleven: The Common-Interest Landscape

Notes

Acknowledgements

Index

About the Author

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