Through his many books and in the Horticulturist, the nation's first
journal about landscape gardening, Andrew Jackson Downing (1815-1852)
promoted a naturalistic style of landscape design as the "modern"
alternative to the classical geometry of the "ancient" gardens of Italy
and France. In this compelling biography, David Schuyler explores
Downing's efforts to adapt English aesthetic principles to American
climate and republican social institutions, delving the implicit
complications of class in his prescriptions for American society.