The Alameda Gibraltar Botanic Gardens

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Alameda: Gibraltar Botanic Gardens
The Dell in the heart of the Alameda Gardens
The Dell in the heart of the Alameda Gardens
Location Gibraltar
Coordinates 36°42′N 5°13′W / 36.7, -5.21
Size hectares (0.060 km²)
Opened 1816
Status Botanical garden
An evening stroll in the 19th century at the entrance of the Alameda Gardens.
An evening stroll in the 19th century at the entrance of the Alameda Gardens.
Wisteria sinensis (Chinese Wisteria), a woody, deciduous, perennial climbing vine in the genus Wisteria, in the gardens.
Wisteria sinensis (Chinese Wisteria), a woody, deciduous, perennial climbing vine in the genus Wisteria, in the gardens.

The Alameda Gibraltar Botanic Gardens or The Alameda Gardens is a botanical garden in Gibraltar, spanning around six hectares (0.060 km²).

Contents

[edit] History

The gardens were founded in 1816 by Governor of Gibraltar General George Don in order to provide a recreational area for the Garrison at the time. Serving that purpose for many years, the gardens fell into disrepair in the 1970s until The Gibraltar Botanic Gardens project , funded by a firm of environmental consultants and managers, Wildlife (Gibraltar) Limited, came about in 1991.

[edit] The Eliott Memorial

General Don had commissioned a memorial of George Augustus Eliott, 1st Baron Heathfield in 1815 which did not materialise in the form initially requested. A colossal statue of General Eliot, carved from the bowsprit of the Spanish ship San Juan Nepomuceno, taken at the Battle of Trafalgar was created in lieu. The statue was taken to the Governor's residence, The Convent, where it stands today, being replaced by a bronze bust in 1858.

[edit] Plants of the Gardens

The plants of the Alameda Gardens are a combination of native species and others brought in from abroad:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Languages