Background
As recorded in various census returns, George was the son of nurseryman James Nicholson.
As recorded in various census returns, George was the son of nurseryman James Nicholson.
He is noted for having edited "The Illustrated Dictionary of Gardening", produced as an eight-part alphabetical series between 1884 and 1888 with a supplement, and published by L. Upcott Gill of London. George worked at the nursery of Fisher & Holmes in Sheffield, travelled to France and found employment at Louisiana Muette nursery in Paris, becoming fluent in both French and German. He started work at Kew in 1873, succeeding the late John Smith as Curator of the Gardens in 1886 and staying on until 1901, when ill-health forced his retirement.
Even so, he undertook the occasional botanical project when his health permitted.
He was living at Old Deer Park Villas, Richmond in 1881, doing clerical work for H.M Office of Works. He contributed to the Journal of Botany of 1875 with an article titled “The wild flora of Kew Gardens and Pleasure grounds”.
Earlier volumes of The Garden contain many of his articles on cultivated trees and shrubs. His most important work, though, was the “Illustrated Dictionary“, which soon was regarded as the standard reference work, a French edition also being published at the time.
The Royal Horticultural Society"s present Dictionary of Gardening published by Oxford, has Nicholson"s Illustrated Dictionary as its basis, and has retained its predecessor"s layout.
Nicholson was an authority on oaks and maples, and was appointed as judge in the horticulture section of the Chicago Exposition of 1893. He also inspected the Arnold Arboretum and a few other outstanding gardens in the United States, reporting back in a paper entitled "Horticulture and Arboriculture in the United States" published in the Kew Bulletin of February 1894. His collection of British plants was left to Professor Trail which, together with Trail’s specimens laid the foundation of the British collection at Aberdeen.
George Nicholson is denoted by the author transcript G.Nicholson when citing a botanical name.
Nicholson was also instrumental in the planning stages of the Cruickshank Botanic Garden.