It may be because the newness of our
country and the fragile character of our early structures
have prevented the accumulation of inferior, ugly,
and uncomfortable houses, as the nucleus around which
later building has crystallized; it may be from circumstances
which have prevented the isolated residence of the
better classes of our people; or it may be the result
of accident. Whatever the reason, it is beyond
dispute that the United States is par excellence
a land of beautiful villages. North, south, east,
and west, there are plenty of hideous conglomerations
of poor-looking houses, with an absence of every element
of beauty; but there are thousands of other villages
scattered all over the land, which are full of the
evidences of good taste in their regulation and in
their management.
As a rule, these more attractive features
are very much modified by the presence of badly-kept
private places or neglected public buildings, and
by a general air of untidiness. Still, the foundation
of attractiveness is there; and nothing is needed
beyond a well-organized and well-guided control of
public sentiment, to remove or to hide the more objectionable
features, and to permit such beauty as the village
may possess to manifest itself.
The real elements of beauty in a village
are not fine houses, costly fences, paved roadways,
geometrical lines, mathematical grading, nor any obviously
costly improvements. They are, rather, cosiness,
neatness, simplicity, and that homely air that grows
from these and from the presence of a home-loving
people.
To state the case tersely, the shiftless
village is a hideous village, while the charm which
we often realize without analyzing it comes of affectionate
care and attention.
There are villages in New England,
in Western New York, and all over the West, even to
the far side of Arkansas, which impress the visitor
at once as being homelike and full of sociability
and kindliness; which delight him, and lead him almost
to wish that his own lot had been cast within their
shades. These are chiefly villages where the evidences
of public and private care predominate, or are at
least conspicuous. A critical examination would,
in almost every case, develop very serious evidence
of neglect, unwholesomeness, and bad neighborhood.
Within a few years, beginning, I believe,
in Massachusetts, the more thoughtful of those whose
affections are centred in their village homes have
united in organized efforts to make their villages
more tidy, to interest all classes of society in attention
to those little details the neglect of which is fatal,
and to make the village, what it certainly should
be, an expression of the interest of its people in
their homes and in the surroundings of their daily
life.
The first of these associations of
which I have any knowledge (though, as such work is
unobtrusive, there may have been many before it) was
the “Laurel Hill Association” of Stockbridge,
Mass. It takes its name from a wooded knoll in
the centre of the village, which had been dedicated
to public use. The first object of the association
was to convert this knoll into a village park.
Then they took in hand the village burial-ground,
which was put in proper condition and suitably surrounded
with hedge and railing. Then the broad village
street was properly graded and drained, and agreeable
walks were made at its sides. Incidentally to
this, the people living along both sides of the streets
were encouraged to do what they could to give it an
appropriate setting by putting their own premises
into tasteful condition and maintaining them so.
The organization worked well, and accomplished good
results. The Rev. N. P. Eggleston, formerly of
Stockbridge, in a paper on village improvements written
for the “New York Tribune,” thus describes
the collateral work and influences of the Laurel Hill
Association:
“Next followed the planting of
trees by the roadside wherever trees were lacking.
The children, sometimes disposed in their thoughtlessness
to treat young trees too rudely, were brought in as
helpers of the association, while at the same
time put under a beneficial culture for themselves.
Any boy who would undertake to watch and care
for a particular tree for two years was rewarded by
having the tree called by his name. Other
children were paid for all the loose papers and
other unsightly things which they would pick
up and remove from the street.
“Gradually the work of the association
extended. It soon took in hand the streets
connected with the main street. Year by year it
pushed out walks from the centre of the village
toward its outer borders; year by year it extended
its line of trees in the same manner; and year
by year there has been a marked improvement in the
aspect of the village. Little by little,
and in many nameless ways, the houses and barns,
the dooryards and farms, have come to wear a look
of neatness and intelligent, tasteful care, that makes
the Stockbridge of to-day quite a different place
from the Stockbridge of twenty years ago.
Travellers passing through it are apt to speak of
it with admiration as a finished place, and, compared
with most even of our New England villages, it
has such a look; but the Laurel Hill Association
does not consider its home finished, nor its
own work completed. Still the work goes on.
Committees are even now conning plans for further
improvements. By itself, or by suggestions
and stimulations offered to others, the association
is aiming at the culture of the village people
through other agencies than those of outward
and physical adornment. It fosters libraries,
reading-rooms, and other places of resort where
innocent and healthful games, music and conversation
will tend to promote the social feeling, and
lessen vice by removing some of its causes.”
No one can drive through this beautiful
old place without realizing the effect of some influence
different from that which has usually been at work
in country towns. One feels that it is a village
of homes; that the people who live in it love it,
and that it has no public or private interest so insignificant
as to be neglected.
I have cited this instance somewhat
at length, because it was the first, as it is the
most complete, that has come to my notice. In
other places, more serious work of improvement has
been undertaken in the direction of sewerage, gas-lighting,
&c. In fact, the present writing was suggested
by frequent requests for information and advice on
the more practical parts of the subject.
At the outset it is to be said that
the organization and control of the village society
is especially woman’s work. It requires
the sort of systematized attention to detail, especially
in the constantly-recurring duty of “cleaning
up,” that grows more naturally out of the habit
of good housekeeping than out of any occupation to
which men are accustomed. Then, too, it calls
for a degree of leisure which women are the most apt
to have, and it will especially engage their interest
as being a real addition to the field of their ordinary
routine of life. The sort of enthusiasm which
has led to marked success in the Dorcas Society and
other organized action outside of the household, for
which American country women are noted, will find
here a new and engaging object. This, however,
is only a suggestion by the way, and one which may
or may not be appropriate under varying circumstances.
If we assume, which is not altogether
true, that the main purpose of village improvement
is to improve the appearance of the village,
we must still understand that the direct object of
the society should not be alone nor chiefly in the
direction of appearance.
What it is especially desirable that
a village should appear to be is: a wholesome,
cleanly, tidy, simple, modest collection of country
homes, with all of its parts and appliances adapted
to the pleasantest and most satisfactory living of
its people. All improvements should therefore
have this fundamental tendency, and every element of
adornment, and every evidence of careful attention,
should be only an outgrowth of the effort to obtain
the best practical results. Costly park railing
where no railing is needed, width of roadway greater
than the needs of the community require, formal geometric
lines and surfaces where more natural slopes and curves
would be practically better, elaborate fountains or
statuary out of keeping with the general character
of the village, (the gift of a public-spirited, ambitious,
and pretentious fellow-townsman,) and isolated examples,
as in a church or schoolhouse, of a style of architecture
which would be more appropriate for a city, all
these are obtrusive and objectionable, and are consequently
in bad taste. In so far as these or any other
elements of improvement are unsuited to the conditions
in which they are placed, they are undesirable; and
it would be well for those having the interest of the
village in charge, to adopt an early resolution to
accept no gifts, and to allow no work of construction
or embellishment, which is not, first of all, appropriate
to the modest character of a well-regulated country
village.
If every public building is sufficient
for its uses and suggests no undue outlay for show
alone; if the roads and walks are such as the uses
of the people require; if the fountain suggests a tasteful
ornament and centre of freshness and coolness, rather
than a monument of some citizens liberality and ambition;
if the village green or park is a proper pleasure-ground
for old and young; and, in short, if every thing that
is done and every dollar that is expended has for its
object only the improvement of the conditions of living, then
there will be needed only the element of careful keeping
to maintain always the best sort of beauty that is
possible under the circumstances.
No satisfactory result can be attained
without organization. The work will necessarily
require much money and more time in order to avoid
an undue tax upon individuals. It is desirable,
too, that, so far as possible, every member of the
community should be interested in the work, and should
contribute in labor or in money according to his means.
This general interest can be secured much better through
the influence of an organization in which all are
interested, than by any individual effort.
The association should become the
distributor, not only of the moneys accruing from
membership fees, &c., but of contributions made by
citizens, or subscriptions raised by combined effort
for general or specific works of improvement.
It should be, in fact, not only the inciter of public
spirit, but the director of public effort.
The precise form of constitution for
such an association must necessarily depend more or
less on circumstances; and I sketch only as a basis
for discussion, the following form suggested by the
regulations governing the Laurel Hill Association
of Stockbridge:
Article I.
This Association shall
be called “The Village Improvement
Association of .”
Article II.
The object of this Association shall
be to improve and ornament the streets and public
grounds of the village by planting and cultivating
trees, establishing and maintaining walks, grading
and draining roadways, establishing and protecting
good grass plats and borders in the streets and
public squares, securing a proper public supply
of water, establishing and maintaining such sewerage
as shall be needed for the best sanitary condition
of the village, providing public fountains and
drinking-troughs, breaking out paths through
the snow, lighting the streets, encouraging the formation
of a library and reading-room, and generally doing
whatever may tend to the improvement of the village
as a place of residence.
Article III.
The officers of this Association shall
be a President, two Vice-Presidents, a Secretary,
and a Treasurer, who shall constitute the Executive
Committee. These officers shall be elected at
the annual meeting, and shall hold their offices
until their successors shall have been elected.
Article IV.
It shall be the duty of the President,
and in his absence of the senior Vice-President,
to preside at all meetings of the Association,
and to carry out all orders of the Executive Committee.
Article V.
It shall be the duty of the Secretary
to keep a correct and careful record of all proceedings
of the Association, and of the Executive Committee,
in a book suitable for their preservation; to give
notice of all meetings of the Association and
of the Executive Committee; to make all publications,
and to give all public and private notices ordered
by the Executive Committee, and to attend to
all the correspondence of the Association.
Article VI.
It shall be the duty
of the Treasurer to keep the funds of the
Association, and to
make such disbursements as may be ordered by
the Executive Committee.
Article VII.
It shall be the duty of the Executive
Committee to manage all the affairs of the Association,
to employ all laborers, to make all contracts,
to expend all moneys, and generally to direct and
superintend all improvements which in their discretion,
and with the means at their command, will best
serve the public interest. The Executive
Committee shall hold a meeting at least once in each
month, and as much oftener as they may deem expedient.
The Executive Committee shall have
power to institute premiums to be awarded for
planting and protecting ornamental trees, and for
doing such other acts as may seem to them worthy
of such encouragement. They shall also encourage
frequent public meetings of the Association and
of citizens generally, both with a view to maintain
an interest in their work, and for the general encouragement
of the habit of meeting for discussion and amusement.
Article VIII.
Three members of the
Executive Committee present at any meeting
shall constitute a quorum
for transacting business; and the vote of
a majority of those
present shall be binding on the Association.
Article IX.
No debt shall be contracted by the
Executive Committee beyond the amount of available
funds within their control to pay it; and no member
of this Association shall be liable for any debt of
the Association beyond the amount of his or her
subscription.
Article X.
Every person over fourteen years of
age who shall plant and protect a tree under
the direction of the Executive Committee, or who
shall pay the sum of one dollar annually, and shall
obligate him or herself to pay the same for three
years, shall be a member of this Association;
and every child under fourteen years of age, who
shall pay or shall become obligated to pay as before
the sum of twenty-five cents annually for three
years, shall be a member of this Association.
Article XI.
The payment of ten dollars
annually for three years, or of
twenty-five dollars
in one sum, shall constitute a person a member
of this Association
for life.
Article XII.
The autograph signatures
of all members of the Association shall be
preserved in a book
suitable for that purpose.
Article XIII.
An annual meeting of the Association
shall be held at such place as the Executive
Committee may direct, on the fourth Wednesday of August,
at two o’clock, P.M. Notice of such meeting
shall be posted on each of the churches and at
the post-office at least seven days prior to
the time of holding said meetings, and a written notice
shall be sent to all non-resident members.
Other meetings of the Association may be called
by the Executive Committee on seven days’ notice
as above prescribed.
Article XIV.
At the annual meeting, the Executive
Committee shall report the amount of money received
during the year, and the source from which it
has been received; the amount of money expended during
the year, and the objects for which it has been
expended; the number of trees planted at the
cost of the Association; the number planted by individuals,
with the location, the kind of tree, and the name of
the planter; and generally all of the acts of
the Committee. This report shall be entered
on the record of the Association.
Article XV.
Any person who shall
plant a tree under the direction of the
Executive Committee,
and shall protect it for five years, shall be
entitled to have such
tree known forever by his or her name.
Article XVI.
This Constitution may be amended by
the Executive Committee with the approval of
the majority of the members present at any annual
meeting of the Association, or at any special
meeting, the notice of which shall have been
accompanied by a copy of the proposed amendment,
with the statement that the amendment is to be voted
on at such meeting.
I have provided, in the above draft
of a constitution, for an executive committee of only
five members; for the reason that, while it will be
comparatively easy to secure the services of this number,
the duties and responsibilities of a larger committee
would be so distributed that there would be too often
occasion for the application of the old adage:
“What is everybody’s business is nobody’s
business.” The Laurel Hill Association
has an executive committee of fifteen, in addition
to seven officers. This large committee (twenty-two)
serves to secure the interest of a larger number of
citizens; but the same thing may be as well accomplished
by inviting the co-operation of citizens in the work
of sub-committees, the chairman of each of which would
be a member of the regular executive committee.
In Easthampton, Mass., there is a board of fourteen
directors, and there are committees on sanitary matters,
on setting out trees, on sidewalks and hitching-posts,
&c. It would be prudent to restrict the number
of members of these sub-committees to three; one from
the executive committee and two from outside.
Besides special executive work, a
vast deal has been done wherever improvement societies
have been organized, in the way of stimulating citizens
to adorn their private grounds, or at least to keep
their grounds and fences in good order, removing weeds
and rubbish from the sidewalk, keeping the grass well
trimmed and free from litter and leaves. What
most detracts from the good appearance of any village
is the slovenly look which comes from badly hung gates,
crooked fences, absent pickets, and general shiftlessness
about private places; and it is by encouraging citizens
to take a pride in attention to these minor details,
that the association will do its best work. This
result may be accomplished almost entirely without
the expenditure of money. It is in attention
to little things and in securing the co-operation of
private owners, a co-operation which will
call for an inappreciable amount of labor, that
the most telling work of the officers of the society
is to be done.
So far as these details are concerned,
it is hardly necessary in a paper of this sort to
do more than to call attention to them. They are
within the capacity of every citizen, and they will
naturally suggest themselves to any person who would
be likely to undertake the direction of an improvement
association. There are other and really more important
objects looking to a certain amount of landscape gardening
and engineering, on which specific instruction may
be desired, and often in cases where it will be impracticable
to employ professional assistance. These are
as follows:
1. The construction of sidewalks.
2. The construction and care of roadways.
3. The supply of water, and the
construction of drinking-troughs.
4. The laying-out and adornment
of public squares and other open spaces.
5. The establishment of a system
of sewerage or sanitary drainage, including the removal
of excessive soil moisture.
SIDEWALKS.
No one thing has more to do with the
comfort of those living in country villages than sidewalks
which are good at all seasons of the year. Those
fortunate villages which are built on a gravelly soil,
with a perfect natural drainage, need little more
in this direction than such a conformation of the
surface as will prevent water from standing on the
footway when the ground is frozen. At all other
times it sinks naturally away into the earth.
It is much more often the case that the character
of the soil or subsoil prevents a settling away of
water, or that subterranean oozing from higher ground
keeps the earth throughout the spring and autumn,
and after heavy rains in summer, damp, and often sloppy.
Wherever the ground is of such a character as to prevent
the rapid sinking to a considerable depth of all excessive
moisture, there is sure to be a disagreeable condition
of the footway whenever the lower soil is locked with
frost, and the surface is thawed. Even with the
best drainage, natural or artificial, this condition
will exist for a short time while frost is coming
out of the ground; but with good drainage it is of
so temporary a character as hardly to justify any expensive
finishing of the surface, except perhaps in the case
of the most frequented walks.
To overcome occasional sloppiness
where the difficulty is not deep-seated, there is
no cheaper nor better device than to dress the surface
with coal-ashes. Indeed, if these are used to
a sufficient thickness, they are practically as good
as concrete or the best gravel. When first applied,
they are dusty and unpleasant; but the first wetting
lays the dust, and they soon settle to a firm consistency,
and make a very pleasant walk, with the great advantage
of being entirely barren, and preventing the growth
of weeds and grass. If the ashes of a village
are collected and screened, the cinders being used
at the bottom, and the surface being smoothly dressed
with the finer material, they will make as satisfactory
walks, even where the use is considerable, as any
other material. The color is unobtrusive, and
the surface soon becomes hard enough to bear sweeping.
Those who are more ambitious for effect may prefer
a walk made of tar-and-gravel concrete; and this, if
well made, is good, durable, and satisfactory.
So far as the improvement association is concerned,
it can find many ways for expending the difference
of cost between ashes and concrete, which will accomplish
a much more telling result.
If gravel can be obtained without
too much expense, it may be used with excellent results
to a depth of from one to three inches, according to
the porosity of the subsoil, more being
needed where the ground is inclined to become soft.
In using gravel it is best either to screen it, using
the coarser parts below and the finer parts at the
surface, or, after applying it, to add a thin layer
of earth, barely sufficient to fill its spaces, to
“bind” it so as to give it a firm and solid
consistency. Loose and rattling gravel makes a
handsome walk to look at, but an unpleasant one to
walk upon. Nothing is more agreeable than well-trodden,
dry, root-bound earth, as where grass has been worn
away by frequent use; but this becomes at once objectionable
on being saturated with rain or moistened by melting
frost.
It is a common impression, that all
thoroughly good foot-paths must be dug out to a considerable
depth, filled with loose stones, and dressed at the
top with some good finishing material; but this is
not necessary even for the best work. The great
point is to secure a thorough draining of the sub-stratum,
so that there shall be no rising of ooze-water from
below, and so that the ground shall be free from such
saturation as to cause heaving during frost.
This condition may be secured by a suitable draining
of the ground immediately under the walk, and by the
use of a well-compacted and tightly-bound surface
covering of such form as to shed or turn away rain-water. The centre of the
walk is slightly crowning, say one inch
higher than the sides, so that rain falling
upon it will flow readily toward the grass-border
at either side. To prevent the ponding of water
at the sides when the ground is frozen, the surface
of the walk at its edges should be well above the
level of the adjoining ground; but it may be necessary
under some circumstances to furnish, here and there,
a channel or surface-gutter across the walk, to allow
the accumulation at the higher side to escape.
Rarely will deep gutters at the sides be necessary
or desirable. If the walk is laid at a sufficient
height to turn water on to the adjoining ground instead
of receiving water from this, it will be easy to keep
it dry. We will assume that the path in question
is to be made over a tenacious clay soil, with a considerable
oozing from the hillside, the most unfavorable
condition that can be found, especially in cold climates.
The first thing to be secured is the cutting-off of
the subsoil water from the hill. This may be done
by digging a trench as narrow as possible, six
inches will be better than more, as requiring less
filling material, to a depth of three feet.
In the bottom of this drain lay a common land-tile
drain, with collars at the joints if these can be
procured, and, if not, with a bit of paper laid over
the joints to prevent the entrance of loose material,
and to hold the pipes in place during construction.
The ditch should then be filled with cinders, gravel,
or coarse sand. If stones are to be used, they
should be broken to a small size, not more
than one inch in diameter, and the loose
bits should be mixed with them in the filling.
Very small interstices will be sufficient to allow
water to pass freely through, while if large stones
are used, with large interstices, there will be danger
of a washing-in of earth sufficient in time to obstruct
both the stonework and the tile. The smaller the
tile, so long as it is sufficient for its purpose,
the better; for lengths of five hundred feet or less,
an interior diameter of an inch and a quarter will
be sufficient; from this to one thousand feet, use
an inch and a half bore. If possible, before
exceeding this length, secure an outlet for the water
in the roadside gutter or some other channel of exit.
The tile-drain, at a depth of three feet, will remove
all subsoil water from under the walk, and all that
may be delivered into the loosely filled trench at
its side. The loose filling of the trench should
not be carried nearer than within six inches of the
surface of the ground, and should be covered with
fine and well-packed earth to prevent the entrance
of surface-water which would soon carry in silt
enough to stop its action. Whatever covering
is adopted for the walk itself, it must be of such
a character as to prevent any thing like a free admission
of surface-water. Concrete will do this perfectly;
and either ashes, or gravel dressed at the top with
ashes, if well raked and rolled at the outset to a
smooth surface, will soon become so bound together
as to shed pretty nearly all rain falling upon it.
The difference in cost between a walk made in this
way, and one dug out for its whole width to a depth
of two feet, and filled first with stone and then with
gravel and a suitable surface dressing, will be very
important; and it is safe to say that the cheaper
will be at least as good and durable as the more expensive
method. In all construction of sidewalks, whether
public or private, regard must be had to the surface
conformation, and some device must be adopted for
preventing the flow of water upon the walk from the
adjoining ground, and for the easy delivery of storm-water
falling upon the walk itself.
ROADWAYS.
The great expense of Macadamizing
or Telfordizing puts these systems almost out of the
reach of small communities. Wherever the original
expense can be borne, the subsequent cost of maintenance
will be so slight, and the result generally will be
so satisfactory, as to make it always a good investment.
The circumstances under which these costly forms of
construction may be adopted will be greatly extended
if we can overcome the prevalent American prejudice
in favor of wide roadways. Against wide
streets there is, as a rule, no objection, though
exceptional narrow and well-shaded lanes have a rural
charm that will always commend them to persons of
taste. A wide street, that is, broad spaces between
fences, by no means implies a broad roadway. All
we need in the principal thoroughfare of a busy village
is such a width as will allow of the easy passing
of vehicles in the middle of the road, and the standing
of one vehicle at rest at each side. This will
be accomplished, even in the business street of a
village, by a width of roadway of thirty feet.
Under most other circumstances twenty feet of roadway
will be ample. This will allow of the moving
of three vehicles side by side, and will give a leeway
of six feet between two vehicles passing each other.
On both sides of this roadway, except
for the necessary sidewalks, the whole space to the
fences should be in well-kept grass, which is the
cheapest to secure, the most economical to maintain,
and the most agreeable to see, of all ground covering.
It is not unusual in country towns to find a width
of from sixty to eighty feet devoted to a muddy, dusty,
and ill-kept roadway. From one-half to two-thirds
of this width is waste space, which must either remain
an eyesore, or entail an undue cost for maintenance.
When both sides of the street are occupied by places
of business, it may be necessary to provide for some
occasional driving close to the buildings for the
delivery of merchandise; but this occasion will rarely
be so regular as to cause any serious damage to grass.
If the line of hitching-posts is placed within fifteen
feet of the centre of the roadway on each side, it
will be seldom that any one will drive over the bordering
grass, especially if there is, as there generally
should be, a well-defined gutter or well-kept grass
with a curbstone border at each side.
In considering the width to be given
to roadways, it should be understood that every form
of road is more or less costly to make and to keep
in order, and that the cost of both items is in direct
proportion to the width. If to the cost of making
and grading an ordinary roadway sixty feet wide, we
add the capital sum whose interest would be necessary
to keep this width in good repair, we shall have an
amount that would go far toward the construction and
maintenance of a road of the very best quality only
thirty feet wide. Furthermore, while it is impossible
to estimate such items exactly, and while the amount
thus saved cannot be controlled for the road-making
account, the saving in the wear and tear of vehicles,
and in the team force needed to move heavy loads,
constitutes an important argument in favor of the best
construction. The amount thus saved in the short
streets of the village, where the principal traffic
is over rough country roads, would not be very great,
but it would enable the road authorities of the township
to realize the advantage of first-rate roads and the
degree to which the narrowing of the roadway cheapens
construction. As a result, there would soon be
an extension of the improvement over the more important
highways into the country; where a well-metalled width
of twelve feet would accommodate nearly the whole
traffic, and where the proper application of a cheap
system of under-drainage would make well-metalled roads
extremely cheap to maintain.
In the island of Jersey, there are
many excellent roads only six feet wide. These
are provided with frequent little bays or turn-outs
to allow teams to pass each other. Although such
extremely narrow roads are not to be recommended,
the difference in comfort and economy of teampower
between these and the average American dirt road is
enormously in their favor. The widest roads in
Jersey, leading from a busy town of thirty thousand
inhabitants into a thickly settled farming region where
business and pleasure travel is very active, and where
“excursion cars” carrying thirty or forty
persons are constantly passing, are only twenty-four
feet wide; often only of this width between the hedge-rows,
the road itself being an excellent footpath for its
whole width. Nowhere else in the world is the
rural charm more perfectly developed than in Jersey,
and no element of its great beauty is so conspicuous
and so constantly satisfactory as its narrow and embowered
lanes and roadways.
This, however, by the way, and only
as a suggestion, for the sake of variety. As
a rule, we may at least accept much less width than
is now usual for our country and village roads.
Wherever it is intended to build expensive stone roads,
those having the work in charge will naturally employ
a competent engineer, or will at least appeal to Prof.
Gillespie’s work on road-making, or to some other
authority. Space need not be given here to engineering
details, which would require a lengthy elucidation.
There is, however, a sort of road-making materially
more costly at the outset than that now in vogue,
but much less costly in the long-run, if we consider
the element of practical value and the cost of maintenance.
It depends more on fundamental principles of construction
than on special processes of finishing, and will be
more or less satisfactory according to the character
of the soil and of the covering material available.
The great enemy of all roads is excessive
moisture; and the chief purpose of all methods of
improvement is to get rid of this, or to counteract
its effect. As in the case of foot-paths, wherever
the porous character of the subsoil, and the absence
of higher-lying wet lands, is such that no accumulation
of water upon or under the roadway need be feared,
the greatest difficulty is at once set aside.
Roads lying on such a soil may be over-dusty in dry
weather. When the subsoil is temporarily impervious
because of its frozen condition, they may become unduly
muddy, or, when the situation is such as to lead hill-water
upon them, they may be badly washed; but they are
free from the great difficulties that beset all roads
which for a large part of the year are underlaid by
an over-saturated, compact subsoil. Where such
natural drainage is secured, no artificial under-drainage
will be needed. In many more instances, all that
will be required in the way of draining will be to
lead away the sources of wet-weather springs, which
break through the road-bed and cause deep sloughs.
Where incomplete or partial artificial under-draining
is needed, the need is absolute; and whether we consider
the durability of the road, or the degree to which
its traffic is interfered with by its wet condition,
we may be confident that every dollar spent in well-directed
under-draining will be invested to the very best advantage.
The varying conditions of wetness, and the different
sources of surplus water, must be regarded in deciding
precisely how much of this work is needed, and how
it should be done. Details cannot be fully considered
here; but as a general rule it may be said, that where
the subsoil generally is of an impervious character,
and where the road is more or less wet and weeping
after long rains, a continuous system of under-drains
is required. If the trouble is local, here and
there in spots, and is obviously caused by the breaking
up of springs from the road-bed, such partial work
may be adopted as will tap the sources of these springs,
and lead their water harmlessly away. Gisborne,
one of the best agricultural writers of England, put
the case tersely and well when objecting
to the system of circumventing springs he
said, “Hit him straight in the eye, is
as good a maxim in draining as in pugilism.”
It is best not to pass up at the side of a spring,
and so creep around behind it to head off its water;
but to drive the drain straight through it, and far
enough beyond it to tap and lead away at a lower level
the water which causes it. These drains, as well
as all others intended simply to remove subsoil water,
and not to cut off a weeping stream, are best made
with common drain-tiles laid as before directed, and
covered immediately with well-packed earth. Water
enters an under-drain, not from above, but from below;
that is to say, as water, from whatever source, fills
the subsoil, it rises therein until it reaches the
floor of the drain, when it enters and is led away,
just as water falling into a cask which stands on end
flows off at the under side of the bung-hole when
it reaches its level. Even if the cask be filled
to the top with earth, the rain falling upon it will
descend perpendicularly to the bottom, and will flow
off at the bung only when the soil to that level has
become saturated. It will descend through the
soil by the straightest course, and will raise the
general level. It will not violate the laws of
gravitation, and run diagonally toward the point of
outlet, as seems to be the general supposition when
the perplexing question, “How does water get
into the drain?” is first considered. When
we drive a drain through a spring and into the water-bearing
stratum which feeds it, we simply make it easier for
the water to escape by the drain than to keep on at
the higher level, and break out at the surface of
the ground.
As in the case of the sidewalk illustrated
in Figure 1, in cutting off a continuous weeping or
ooze from higher land, it is best to introduce a vertical
filling of porous material through which the water
will descend and enter the drain; but, excepting this
single instance, all that we need to do, so far as
subterranean work is concerned, is to furnish an easy
and sufficient channel for the removal of subsoil water.
What constitutes a sufficient drain
is something very much less than what is generally
supposed. In ordinary agricultural drainage, where
the lines of tiles are forty feet apart, a well-laid
tile an inch and a quarter in diameter is sufficient
for a length of one thousand feet that
is, it is sufficient to remove the water of filtration
from an acre of land. If laid with only an inclination
of six inches in one hundred feet, its delivery will
be so rapid as to amount to more than a heavy continuous
rain-fall upon this area. In road drainage, the
same rule would hold true; but, as the soil offers
a certain resistance to the rapid descent of water,
it is best to give a means of outlet at smaller intervals;
and for the best work in roads thirty feet wide or
more, three drains could be used with advantage.
In no case, however, need the size of pipes be larger
than above indicated, if the form of the tiles is
true, and if they are well joined together at their
ends. Tiles of less perfect form had better be
an inch and a half or even two inches in diameter;
but, as a rule, they should not be of a larger size,
for the reason that the amount of water that they may
be expected to carry will not be sufficient to keep
them prop erly freed from silt unless the flow is
concentrated within a narrow channel.
Except in case of necessity, these drains
should have an inclination of not less than six inches
in one hundred feet. There is no objection to
their having more than this wherever the lay of the
land permits or requires it. They may often have
considerably less in case of need; but, the smaller
the rate of inclination, the greater the care needed
in securing a true grade. The water of these
drains should be collected into a single drain, and
led away at intervals of from five hundred to one
thousand feet. It may be delivered into a roadside
gutter, or into a collecting under-drain, according
to the requirements of the situation.
It is now possible to procure drain-tiles
at reasonable cost in almost all parts of the country;
and these are not only very much better than any form
of stone drain, but they are also much cheaper in
construction, the labor of preparing and
handling the stone, and of excavating the wider trench
that stone requires, amounting to more than the cost
of the tile, even with a high charge of transportation
added. Incidentally it is proper to say that
where tiles cannot be had, a mass of gravel or fine
cinders, six inches wide and six inches deep, placed
at the bottom of the drain, and covered with well-packed
soil, is preferable even to broken stone or any
other form of channel that would permit of the rapid
running of water and the washing into the drains of
even a slight amount of silt.
The removal of excessive subsoil moisture
being secured, attention should next be given to the
surface of the road, which should be finished with
the firmest material at hand, with the common
earth of the subsoil where nothing better can be afforded, and
which should be brought to a true grade, with a very
slight slope from the centre to the edge.
For a road thirty feet wide, the elevation of the centre
above the level of the edges should not be more than
four to six inches, and the grade should be made on
a straight line rather than on a curve. If the
road is made as flat as the turning-off of surface-water
will permit, it will be travelled upon in all its
parts; while if it is crowned to a high arch, as is
often the case, it will soon be found that the best
place to drive is in the middle of the road, and foot-tracks
and wheel-tracks will soon form slight channels or
ruts which will lead water lengthwise along the road,
and which will cause an undue amount of wear and washing.
A road may be actually flat to the eye, and equally
convenient for travel at every part of its width, and
still have enough lateral slope to cause water to
run off from it.
It is especially desirable that no
surface-water flowing from the roadside (above all,
when frost is coming out of the ground in the spring)
be permitted to run on to the road. This should
be effectively prevented by the formation of sufficient
gutters, with such outlets as will prevent ponding
at the sides of the road. When it is necessary
to carry the water of the gutters from one side of
the road to the other, culverts should be provided;
and wherever the slope of the road is sufficient to
cause water to flow along it lengthwise, that
is, wherever the inclination is more than about one
in fifty, there should be frequent slight
depressions from the centre diagonally toward the
gutters to carry the flow away before it can accumulate
sufficiently to form a washing current.
If it can be done without hauling
additional material, it is always well to raise the
road-bed somewhat above the level of the adjoining
land, and this may usually be accomplished by throwing
upon it the subsoil of the gutters. In no case
should surface-soil sods or fine road-mud be used
for repairs. The most serious objection to the
absurd system of road-mending so common in this country
lies in the fact that the annual repairing is little
more than the ploughing up and throwing back upon
the roadway of the soft and unsuitable material which
has been washed into the gutters.
What is said above applies especially
to country roads; but it is appropriate, so far as
it goes, to the better-made and better-kept roads
of a village. In the case of these latter, except
where the soil is naturally dry and firm, some attention
should be given to the improvement of the surface;
and it is to be considered whether to adopt the expensive
process of covering with broken stone road-metal, or
to use gravel. One or the other of these is desirable
in all cases where there is much tendency to sloppiness
in wet weather; but any form of artificial covering
is so costly that the early efforts of the improvement
association will produce a more telling result if applied
in other directions. The necessary cross-walks
may be satisfactorily made with coal-ashes.
It is even more easy in a village
than in the country, to have the grades of all roadways
so regulated as to shed rain-water falling upon them,
and to have them so furnished with side gutters so
as to prevent water from the roadside from running
on to them. The simplest way to effect this,
and the neatest way too, is to make gutters outside
of the line of the road, say six inches deep and eight
feet wide, these being at once sodded or sown with
grass and grain to give an early protection against
washing; made on such a shallow curve, they will afford
no obstruction to any system of mowing that may be
adopted, while their great width will give them sufficient
capacity to carry away the water of considerable storms.
The work of construction having been
duly attended to, it is no less important to provide
for regular and constant care. Any rutting that
comes of heavy traffic in bad weather should be obliterated
either by raking, or, better still, by filling the
ruts with gravel or ashes. If such work is attended
to immediately on the occasion for it arising, the
amount of labor required will be very slight; for it
is especially true with reference to roads, that “a
stitch in time saves nine.” If the filling
of ruts and wheel-tracks be done in time, the serious
damage that comes from guttering flows of water lengthwise
along the road may be almost entirely avoided.
The mere cleaning work of both the
roadway and roadside grass spaces, it will be easy
to induce children to perform for slight rewards and
encouragement. The daily removal of bits of paper
and other rubbish will have an excellent effect on
the general appearance of the village. In the
autumn the removal of the fallen leaves will call for
something more than children’s work; but ordinarily
this source of cheap labor will be found sufficient
if properly directed.
PUBLIC WATER SUPPLY.
As a field for encouragement, rather
than as an object for the expenditure of the association’s
funds, the furnishing of an ample supply of water
is entitled to very early consideration. Not only
is the question of public health very seriously involved
in the water problem; but as a mere beautifying element
an abundance of water, to be obtained without labor,
will have a very telling effect by the facility it
gives for preserving the fresh appearance of lawns
and shrubbery, and for the cultivation of flowers
and vines.
Regarded from the horticulturist’s
point of view, the climate of pretty nearly the whole
of this country is simply detestable. We may arrange
to withstand very well the severity of our northern
winters; we expect an entire shutting-up of all garden
industries, and long cold seasons are an accustomed
matter of necessity: but we have never yet learned
to accept with patience the almost annual destruction
of our lawns and gardens and flower-beds by scathing
drought. No public water supply available for
an ordinary village would suffice to overcome the effects
of a dry season over the whole of even a small homestead;
but we may hope to secure enough to keep one or two
small sprinklers flowing steadily through the hot
months, and so keep a little grass measurably green,
and preserve a semblance of life and beauty in flower-beds
and delicate shrubbery. It is very rarely that
it will be possible to supply water enough in a whole
week to equal in its effect a half-hour’s rain;
but the difference between towns where even the small
amount of water is available for the garden and those
which are hopelessly given over to drought shows how
much may be accomplished in this direction even with
limited means.
As in the case of road-making in any
thing like a complete and thorough manner, the providing
of a water supply must necessarily be directed by
professional advice. Although the simpler principles
of hydraulics are sufficiently understood, and although
it would be quite within the ability of a number of
the more intelligent men of any village to secure
and distribute a satisfactory amount of water, the
cost of doing such work in an experimental way by
persons unaccustomed to its details, as compared with
the cost of doing it under the direction of an engineer
whose natural judgment and capacity are supplemented
by experience and skill, would be without doubt far
beyond the fee demanded for his services. In
this case, as in many others connected with public
and private works, it is always bad economy to save
the cost of proper knowledge. Very likely perhaps
indeed very generally the actual performance
of the work, the buying and laying of the pipe, and
all that, can be as cheaply done under home direction
as under that of a public contractor; but the making
of the plans the deciding upon the source
of the supply, upon the means for securing a sufficient
head, the sizes of the pipes, the location and construction
of fire-plugs, and all the minor details of the work will
be more or less economical, according to the skill,
experience, and capacity of the person who directs
it.
The sources from which water may be
obtained are various. Often enough water of the
best quality may be procured by driven, dug, or artesian
wells; but, whenever this course is adopted, the wells
should be located far enough away from the village,
or on land sufficiently high, to make it impossible
that there shall be any fouling of the water-bearing
strata by the filtration from barn-yards, privy-vaults,
or cesspools. Generally, water so secured will
have to be raised to an elevated reservoir by some
mechanical force. If the demand is to be a large
one, and if the community can afford the cost, the
most reliable plan will be to use steam-power for
pumping; but in smaller places, and where economy
is a great object, wind-power may serve an excellent
purpose.
If a stream of pure water is available
at a sufficient height, it may be led directly to
the reservoir, or its current may be used to drive
a water-wheel sufficient to do the pumping. In
a majority of cases there will be found at no great
distance a stream capable of supplying the water needed
throughout the dryest season of the year, but not entirely
free from organic impurities. In such cases it
is often feasible, by excavating a filtering sump
or pump-well at a little distance from the side of
the stream, and at a sufficient depth below the level
of its bed to secure a supply tolerably purified by
filtration through the intervening earth. The
distance at which this sump should be placed from
the bed of the stream will depend on the character
of the soil. The more porous this is, the greater
should the distance be. This question as to the
source from which the water is to be taken is one which,
more than any other, calls for experienced judgment.
Frequently the conformation of the
surrounding country is such that, even where there
is no constant stream, it is possible by the construction
of dams to pond an amount of water, to be furnished
by surface washing, sufficient to supply the demands
of the longest drought. In this case, as in all
others where reservoirs are used, it is important
to have a good depth of water, and not to allow, even
toward the edges, any considerable shallow area.
So far as possible, the depth should be everywhere
great enough to prevent vegetation, and in all the
shallower parts the surface soil should be entirely
removed. As a rule, there should be a depth of
at least fifteen feet of water, except near the very
edges of the pond, and as much more than this as circumstances
will allow.
The distribution of water for private
use is a simple question of construction; but, as
a matter of taste, too vehement a protest cannot be
entered against the common misconception as to what
is desirable in the way of public fountains.
An instance in point is furnished by the public drinking-fountain
in Newport. Some years ago there stood at the
foot of the Parade a grand old stone bowl, hewn out
of a solid block of granite, and filled by a pipe
leading from a copious spring. This was a good,
sensible, substantial drinking-trough, perfectly adapted
to its use, unpretending and handsome. Later,
a public-spirited gentleman, desiring to leave a monument
of his regard for the city, gave a considerable sum
to be used in providing a suitable drinking-fountain
at this point. Those who had the control of the
fund lacked either the good taste or the courage to
refuse to expend it. The result is that this
granite horse-basin one of the best of its
sort has been removed to an obscure position;
and there has been erected in its place a wretched
cast-iron combination of bad architecture and bad statuary,
such as form a conspicuous defacement of the public
squares in Philadelphia, where they serve the double
purpose of furnishing water to the people, and advertising
a cheap clothing establishment. The one compensation
for the violation of good taste inseparable from these
constructions is to be found in the fact that they
must, sooner or later, lead the public to realize
the absolute unfitness of cast iron for monumental
and decorative uses. With the artistic influences
which are now so active in the instruction of the
American people, it is not perhaps unreasonable to
look forward to the day when all of these piles of
pot-metal shall be relegated to the scrap-heap, and
when less offensive fountains shall take their place.
We may even hope to see the iron statue and its stove-like
support which supplies water to the horses of Newport
condemned to the foundry, and its solid old predecessor
restored to the position which it ornamented for so
many years.
A wide margin may be allowed for the
exercise of taste in the arrangement of village fountains;
and where private munificence enables the expenditure
of a considerable sum, a good amount of exterior decoration
may be admissible: but it should always be borne
in mind that so much of the outlay as is needed for
the purpose should go to secure a good artistic design.
Especially should the use of cast iron be avoided,
as being from every point of view, and under all circumstances,
whether in the shape of cast-iron dogs or deer, or
attempts at the divine human form, absolutely and
entirely inadmissible for artistic uses. Better
a dug-out log horse-trough, overflowing through a notch
in its side, as an ornament to the best-kept village
green, than the most elaborate pitcher-spilling nymph
that was ever cast in an iron-foundry. So far
as the mere construction work of public drinking-fountains
and horse-troughs is concerned, not much need be said
except in connection with the overflow. In cold
climates, there is apt to be from all such structures
a spilling of water which covers the ground for some
distance with ice. This may be avoided by carrying
the overflow by a vertical pipe descending through
the body of the water by some well-protected channel
directly into a drain in the ground, at a depth beyond
the direct action of frosts. If the stream is
constant, this depth need be nothing like that to
which frost penetrates into the soil, for
the constant movement of the water will prevent its
freezing, even if covered only a foot deep, though
to something more than this depth it will be desirable
to have the metal pipe enclosed in a larger pipe of
earthenware, giving a space of enclosed air.
Where there is no public supply of
water, it is better in most cases (considering the
nearness of wells in villages to cesspools and privy-vaults),
to depend entirely upon cisterns. In our climate,
where rain is abundant during a considerable portion
of the year, the water falling upon the roof of any
house, if properly collected and stored, is ample
for the whole supply of the family which that roof
shelters. This water as it falls is ordinarily
free from any impurity that can affect its taste,
and from every source of serious fouling; though, after
a long-continued drought, it is well to divert and
discharge upon the surface of the ground the first
ten minutes’ flow of a shower, so that the impurities
of the air and the dust of the roof may first be removed.
After this first dash, lead to the cistern all that
follows. Even with this precaution, the water
will be more agreeable for use if filtered. There
are numerous systems for making filters in cisterns,
but no other is so simple nor so durable and satisfactory
as the separation of that part of the cistern from
which the suction-pipe leads by a wall of brick and
cement. It is simply necessary to build a wall
of brick set on edge (two and a half inches thick),
so as to include about one-quarter of the area of
the bottom, sloping it back so as to terminate against
the side of the cistern at a height of from four to
six feet. This wall should be so well cemented
at its joints that water can only pass through the
material of brick, and for strength its form should
be slightly bulging. A wall of this sort, measuring
say six feet at its base, and rising to a height of
six feet at its highest point, will transmit an amount
of water sufficient to supply the demand of the most
constant pumping that any domestic use can require.
SQUARES AND PUBLIC SPACES.
As a rule, the open spaces in a country
village are subject to no other criticism than that
of neglect; but the exceptions are not rare where an
attempt at improvement has resulted in a sort of cemetery
look that gives any thing but a cheerful, pleasure-ground
aspect.
There is not much danger that persons
who are enthusiastic for the improvement of the town
in which they live will err on the side of too great
simplicity. The public squares and parks of large
and wealthy cities are regulated and maintained at
great cost and under skilful and artistic management;
and they cannot fail to strike country visitors as
being in all ways desirable. So indeed they are.
They are a chief element of the city’s beauty,
and, from an aesthetic point of view, their influence
is the best to which its people are subjected.
But their beauty and their aesthetic influence are
both the result of a well-directed expenditure of
large sums of money. It is quite natural that
an enriched manufacturer or merchant, proud of his
native village, should be ambitious to perpetuate
the memory of his benefaction by providing for some
corresponding decoration of its public green, and
that he should attempt to reproduce there, on the smaller
scale proportionate to the circumstances, the sort
of magnificence that he has seen in the city park.
If left to his own sweet will, as he often
is if he is willing to spend money for the public
benefit, he will, unless a rich man of
the rarer sort, succeed only in producing a conspicuous
imitation.
A park-railing of artistically-worked
wrought-iron will be represented by a cast-iron substitute
of much more elaborate device; and there will probably
be “piled on,” here and there, an amount
of cheap ornamentation which at the first glance will
have a certain imposing effect. In the matter
of planting there may be an amount and variety of foreign
shrubbery and sub-tropical plants, which, under proper
care, would be of great value and beauty, but which,
with the neglect to which they are doomed in their
village home, are quite certain to abort. In fact,
we may expect to see, what indeed we may now see,
in painful degree, in many of our smaller towns, a
halting attempt at the outside show of the city park,
which, in the absence of those elements of artistic
selection and appropriateness to the conditions which
are to prevail, develop, as time goes on, into an
ignominious failure.
The trouble is, that, in all expenditures
of this sort, we are apt to begin at the wrong end.
In the making of a park, every step that is taken,
whether the park be large or small, is a costly one;
and, if taken in their reverse order, every step is
a wasted one. The chief reason why the final
decoration of a city park is so satisfactory is that
it is only the crowning work of many processes which
have had the best and most careful attention from
the outset. The wrought-iron grille, the architectural
fountain, the bronze statue, the delicate trees and
shrubbery, and the smoothly-finished walks and drives,
depend for their success upon a vast amount of costly
fundamental work, and a provision for constant skilful
care, which have cost a deal of money, and which look
to a large permanent outlay. The elaborate fence
must stand on no unstable foundation; the fountain
must be only the ornamental central point of artistic
and well-kept lawns and approaches; the statue must
stand amid appropriate surroundings; and all but the
simpler native vegetation must have its suitable soil,
and be insured its needed protection and care at all
seasons. The degree to which these more ornamental
features may be given to the village green with any
hope of satisfaction will depend almost entirely upon
the thoroughness with which it has been prepared to
receive them. Could the enthusiastic members
of the improvement association be brought face to face
with the cost that is needed for quite hidden fundamental
work in order to prepare their green for the more
elaborate artistic decoration, they would be deterred
at the outset from attempting any thing so ambitious.
Could they know the cost of the mere work of grading
and subsoil cultivation, under-draining, manuring,
laying the deep foundation for foot-paths, and securing
that perfect growth of grass without which all park-like
ornament is robbed of half its value, they would set
their faces resolutely against all propositions on
the part of public-spirited citizens to veneer their
unprepared grounds with misplaced exterior adornment.
If money enough can be provided to
do the work thoroughly well from its very foundation,
then of course nothing more is needed than that its
direction be placed in accomplished hands; but unless
this is fully assured, if as is nearly
always the case, economy is the first thing
to be considered, then the rule of action is fully
stated in two words, simplicity and thoroughness.
Avoid all fantastic ornament, and
all decoration of every sort, that would be appropriate
only to work of a more complete and substantial character.
Let whatever is done be done in the most thorough way.
If the ability is only enough to secure good grass,
then do every thing that is necessary to furnish the
best conditions for the growth of grass, make suitable
provision for its care, and attempt nothing further.
Good lawn-like grass surfaces, crossed only by foot-worn
pathways over the turf, will be more beautiful and
more satisfactory than will poor grass and cheaply
made and ill-kept walks.
If something more than securing the
best grass is possible, then let the next expenditure
be in the direction of paths, applying to the construction
of these the principles set forth in what has hitherto
been said about sidewalks. In the case of level
walks, with imperfect means of drainage, it is often
desirable to secure the better foundation that is
given by filling in to the depth of a foot or more
with small stone.
Whatever may be the natural character
of the soil, unless always well drained by a porous
subsoil, the first step toward establishing a good
lawn is to secure perfect underdrainage. Establish
a good outlet at the depth of three and a half or
four feet below the surface at the lowest point of
the area to be drained, and then, selecting the necessary
lines for main drains, lay out parallel lines (thirty
feet apart at a depth of three and a half feet, or
forty feet apart at a depth of four feet) to include
the whole area, and on these lines lay well-constructed
drains of small open-jointed tiles. Cover these
tiles with the most compact earth that has been excavated,
and, after filling to a depth of one foot, tramp or
ram this earth tightly. Then fill the rest of
the trench, heaping over the lines any excess of material
that may need the settling effect of heavy rains to
work it into place.
The next step is to reverse or thoroughly
mix the whole soil to a depth of at least fifteen
inches. This work can be completely done only
with the aid of hand-shovelling, but the aid of the
plough will greatly facilitate it. Its purpose
is to secure such an admixture of the organic matter
of the surface soil with the more compact material
of the subsoil as will make it sufficiently porous
and fertile for the easy penetration of roots.
It is best that this work should be done in autumn;
and, if the land is level, that the freshly raised
subsoil should be left exposed in its rough and lumpy
condition without harrowing to
the frosts of winter. If washing is to be apprehended,
then sow the ground thickly with rye, harrowing in
the seed only roughly. If the seed is sown early
enough, the growth will be sufficient to protect the
surface from washing. During the winter, let the
whole surface be heavily covered with stable-manure, the
more heavily the better, as there is no limit to the
amount of coarse manure that may with advantage be
used for the establishment of permanent grass.
In the spring, as soon as the ground is dry enough
to work easily, plough in the manure with as shallow
furrows as will suffice to cover the most of it; then
harrow repeatedly, bringing the surface to as true
a grade as possible, and sow it heavily with a mixture
of Rhode Island bent grass, Kentucky blue grass, and
white clover. As soon as the seed is well sprouted,
showing green over the whole ground, roll the area
repeatedly and thoroughly until it is as smooth and
hard as it is possible to make it. As soon as
the grass has attained the height of three inches,
let it be cut with a lawn-mower, and let the cutting
be repeated at least weekly throughout the season
of rapid growth, and as often as necessary until the
end of autumn.
If paths are to be made, it will simplify
matters to make them after the grass has become well
established, supposing only a good surface footway
of ashes or concrete to be needed; for the small amount
of excavation necessary under either of these systems
may be scattered over the grass spaces without injury.
But if the more thorough system is adopted of underlaying
the walk with a foot or more of stones, then the work,
except the final dressing of gravel or ashes, should
be done in the autumn, or, in any case, before the
final preparation of the soil for seeding.
Concerning trees and ornamental shrubbery
for parks and open spaces, it is not possible to give
detailed directions here, beyond recommending, as
in the case of roadside plantations, that, unless the
work is to remain permanently in the charge of an
experienced gardener, with the necessary appliances
for the care and protection of the more delicate specimens,
the arrangement and the selection should be confined
to the more hardy and vigorous trees and shrubs which
experience has shown to be adapted to the climate
and soil of the locality.
For roadsides, and largely in parks
and village greens, the world offers no tree that
can compare in dignity and grace with the broad-spreading
American elm; though, for the sake of variety, and
for the sake of an earlier effect, many other trees
may be added.