Who was John Webb?
John Webb had an extensive practice as a landscape designer and architect in the late-18th and early-19th centuries.
John Webb was an English landscape designer, who also trained as an architect. He studied under William Emes between 1782 and 1793, and then established his own practice. He worked mainly in the Midlands and the north of England.
In Staffordshire he was commissioned by Josiah Wedgwood to work in the gardens of Lowther Hall and Maer Hall.
In Cheshire he designed work in the gardens of Rode Hall, Tabley House, Crewe Hall, Tatton Park, and Ardene Hall. He followed Emes at Eaton Hall where he added new terrace walls, improved one of the approach roads by levelling it and planting 130,000 trees along it, and built a lake in the grounds.
Bibliography
Laurie, Ian 'Landscape Gardeners at Eaton Park, Chester: I' in Garden History, Vol. 12, No. 1 (Spring, 1984), pp. 39-57
Associated Places
- Aqualate Hall
- Arderne Hall
- Ashridge
- Astle Hall Gardens
- Astley Hall & Park, Chorley
- Brockhall Park
- Cassiobury Park
- Cholmondeley Castle
- Dodington House
- Eaton Hall, Eccleston
- Heaton Park
- Holkham Hall
- Hulton Park
- Lamport Hall
- Lowther Castle
- Maer Hall
- Oulton Park
- Poole Hall
- Pradhoe
- Rode Hall
- Sandon Park
- Shugborough
- Somerford Park
- Tatton Park
- Warleigh Manor
- Weston Park, Weston-under-Lizard
- Willersley Castle
- Woolley Hall, Wakefield