Our Garden Centres
HistoryAn addiction to gardening is not all bad when you consider all the other choices in life.
Origins
Notcutts Family History
Early Broughton Road
Nursery Management: 1897 - 1945
Shows: 1897 - 1945
The Nursery Market: 1897 - 1945
Nursery Production: 1897 - 1945
Family and Management: 1945 - 2010
The Market: 1945 - 2007
Field Production: 1945 - 2005
Propagation and Liners: 1945 - 2007
Containers : 1965 - 2007
Waterers Nurseries
Mattocks Roses
Shows: 1945 - 2009
Notcutts Landscape: 1902 - 2008
Notcutts Garden Centres 1958 - 2010

Notcutt's Family History

What an extraordinary name. Where did it come from?

In Elizabethan times it was probably "Northcote" as in those days names were spelt as they sounded, so in a West Country dialect it evolved to "Norcott". By the time William Notcutt moved from Wrington in Somerset to Ipswich in 1724 to become the pastor at the Tacket Street Meeting House, it had taken its current form - "Notcutt".

The early Notcutts were ministers, then linen traders, before Thomas Foster Notcutt (1752-1803) became a lawyer. There were lawyers in six generations of Notcutts until 1988, with 5 given the name of Stephen Abbott Notcutt. The father of the first Stephen had married into the Abbott family and it had been made clear that, if their name was perpetuated, family money would be left to the eldest son. The money soon ran out but the tradition continues and the youngest, Stephen Abbott Notcutt (VI) was born in 1982.

In Victorian England many professional men were interested in the natural sciences, and the Notcutt family was no different. Stephen Abbott Notcutt (III) had 2 sons. Stephen Abbott Notcutt (IV), born in 1865, had to join the family legal practice. He won a scholarship to Cambridge, where he took a National Science Tripos degree before reading for a BSc in Law in London.

His younger brother Roger Crompton Notcutt (later known as RCN) was born in 1869. He was in a way more fortunate as he was not burdened by obligations to enter the legal practice. It was recommended that, due to ill health, he should pursue an out-door life. Fortunately he also had a keen interest in nature, particularly in the growing of plants. This was an interest he was able to pursue when in his teens, he acquired the Broughton Road Nursery in Ipswich.

In 1901 RCN married Maud Hetty Smith Fielding of Ipswich and in 1902 Roger Fielding Notcutt, known as 'Tom', was born, later followed in 1906 by Hetty and Marjorie in 1912.

Tom took a Natural Science degree at Cambridge, like his uncle, SAN (IV), before him. Whilst training at Edinburgh Royal Botanical Gardens, he met Jean Macpherson and they married in 1929, two years after Tom returned to the nursery. In 1934 their son Charles was born. Tom's technical training was invaluable and this soon became apparent in the catalogues. In 1935, Tom, working with his father, published "Flowering Cherries" in the Journal of the RHS.