College Garden is available for three weeks in July
only for evening events between 6pm and 9.15pm, on
Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, in a
Marquee installed by the Abbey for up to 500 people. This
exclusive season is particularly popular and it is essential
that if the marquee is required for the next season that
bookings are made by 31 January in any given year for that
summer.
College garden occupies a site that has been
under continuous cultivation for more than 900
years. It was here that the Abbey's first Infirmary
garden was established in the eleventh-century. The
Infirmarer, a senior monk of the Abbey, had care of the
sick and elderly members of the monastic
community as well as administering a
dispensary for local people. He would
have directed the planting and cultivation
of the various herbs needed for medicinal
purposes in the Infi rmary. Some of these
herbs, such as rosemary and fennel, are still
grown in the garden today.
While the original garden was principally an area in
which to grow herbs, fruit and vegetables, it also gave the
convalescing monks a place in the open air for relaxation
and gentle exercise. Today, the garden still offers a tranquil
space for the residents and staff at the Abbey. It has been
open to the public for a relatively short period of its
history.
The oldest surviving features that can be seen today
are the stone precinct walls at the far end of the garden
and running along the left-hand side as you stand at the
entrance gate. These walls date from the fourteenth-century. To the right stands the eighteenth-century
dormitory building belonging to Westminster School. It
was designed by Richard Boyle, third Earl of Burlington,
altering an earlier design by Sir Christopher Wren. The
oldest living things in the present garden are the five tall
plane trees, Platus x hispanicus, planted in 1850.
Receptions: up to 500 people
July only