Inverewe is the garden that challenges the boundaries of horticultural belief.
'Eighty Years in the Highlands' is the book that tells the story of Osgood Hanbury Mackenzie, its audacious founder.

From 1863 Osgood Hanbury Mackenzie created and developed a garden at Inverewe, on the remote north-west coast of Scotland. It has become famous across the world for the variety and rarity of plants grown ‘in a region in which it had not been thought possible for them to exist’. However, few of the thousands of people who visit Inverewe appreciate his significant roles as a ‘heritor’ in the Wester Ross community of Gairloch and Poolewe, or know of his interests in farming, natural history and the Gaelic culture.
Through this study Pauline Butler details the life of Osgood Mackenzie in the context of the local area. She takes us from the world of his childhood in the 1840s, years of destitution and famine, through the crofting and poor law, religious education reforms of the later 1800s and into the widening horizons of the twentieth century.
Her research uncovered much archive material from contemporary newspaper accounts and guide-books, the log books of local schools and the memories of his Hanbury and Mackenzie relatives. His own A Hundred Years in the Highlands and other personal papers proved a rich source of information. Contemporary photographs, most previously unpublished, illustrate the personal and public life, the drama (as when his Mansion House went up in flames) and the poignancy of this complex man.
The Author has added a fascinating and valuable contribution to our understanding of the Highlands during his life-time.

400 pages, illustrated softback

ISBN 978-1-906775-13-1

Osgood in his garden at Inverewe, proud of his palms and rhododendrons
Mairi Sawyer, who committed herself life-long to her father's legacy