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  1. Andrew Jackson Downing (October 31, 1815 – July 28, 1852) was an American landscape designer, horticulturist, writer, prominent advocate of the Gothic Revival in the United States, and editor of The Horticulturist magazine (1846–1852).

  2. Andrew Jackson Downing (born October 30, 1815, Newburgh, New York, U.S.—died July 28, 1852, vicinity of Yonkers, New York) was an American horticulturist, landscape gardener, and architect, the first great landscape designer in the United States.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Andrew Jackson Downing, a leading nurseryman, landscape designer, and author in the mid-19th-century United States, was born in 1815 in Newburgh, New York—where he spent his entire life and career—to nurseryman Samuel Downing (d. 1822) and his wife, Eunice Bridge Downing (d. 1838).

    • Andrew Jackson Downing1
    • Andrew Jackson Downing2
    • Andrew Jackson Downing3
    • Andrew Jackson Downing4
    • Andrew Jackson Downing5
  4. Oct 28, 2019 · Learn how Hudson River horticulturalist Andrew Jackson Downing shaped American landscape design and architecture in the 19th century. Explore his life, works, and legacy through stories, images, and sources.

    • Nancy Tappan
  5. Frontispiece featuring a portrait of A. J. Downing, A treatise on the theory and practice of landscape gardening, 1859. AA9552 D752. Click here for item information. Andrew Jackson Downing was born on October 31, 1815, in Newburgh, New York, the son of a nurseryman.

  6. May 17, 2022 · Born in Newburgh in 1815, Andrew Jackson Downing was the most influential landscape and cottage designer of the 19th Century. His most prominent followers included Frederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux, the designers of Central Park in New York City.

  7. May 17, 2022 · Downing's Influence. Newburgh Buildings. Downing Park. Apostle of Taste. "Horticulturist, landscape gardener, and prolific writer on architecture who, more than any other individual, shaped middle-class taste in the United States in the two decades prior to the Civil War.