Edith Wharton was an authority
on European landscape design as well as a passionate gardener.
She envisioned her gardens as an elegant series of outdoor
rooms and created unique architectural compositions planned
in concert with the house and the surrounding natural landscape.
Three acres of formal gardens surround the house. To date,
more than $3 million has been invested in the preservation
and restoration of The Mount’s gardens and grounds,
including restoring the hardscape and replanting approximately
5,000 trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants. In June 2005,
nearly 3,000 annuals and perennials were planted in Edith
Wharton’s flower garden, the crown jewel of a four-year
restoration of the formal landscape.
The Italianate walled garden and its rustic rockpile fountain
have been completely restored. The Mount’s landscape
is beautiful at all times of the year, reflecting Wharton’s
belief that the garden should possess “a charm independent
of the seasons.”
Completing Wharton's design is a rock garden with grass
steps, a landscape feature rarely seen in America. The garden
has been replanted with flowering shrubs and the many varieties
of native ferns that Wharton personally collected around
the Berkshires.
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"From
the Terrace" Read Landscape
Architecture's September 2003 story on The Mount's
restored gardens.










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