Introduction
During the second half of the nineteenth century, the first public garden in the country for citizens – the Estrela Garden – was built, the boulevard-like Avenida da Liberdade was opened and the competition for the Park of Liberty project was launched. The Campo Grande area was intended to be the lungs of Lisbon; 20,000 trees were planted along the streets and in the gardens of squares – and plazas. This development was in keeping with the city's growth to the north;Footnote 1 its population rose from 169,823 inhabitants in 1860 to 356,009 in 1900 (Figures 1 and 2).Footnote 2
In Portugal, liberalism was the catalyst for Lisbon's modernization.Footnote 3 After a civil war in which absolutists were ranged against liberals (1832–34), the latter's victory and the accession to the throne of Queen Mary II in 1834 finally provided the political stability required for progress in reform to be undertaken in the country and in its capital, Lisbon. This study emphasizes the liberal ideology as opposed to the ancien régime as it was this antagonism between the two forces that led to the creation of public spaces for all citizens, namely public gardens. This ideology was different from British liberalism, which was driven by the Whigs and strongly connected with industrialization and capitalism. It also differed from French liberalism, as it did not result from a revolution even though it was also driven by opposition to the values of the ancien régime. Liberalism in Portugal was a political movement of the nineteenth century driven by the desire to maintain monarchy but with a Constitutional Charter. It was focused on constraining abuses of power from elites, but it became, above all, anti-clerical. There was never a liberal party, but several factions of liberals, the most important of which formed the Regenerator Party and the Historic Party respectively, which in 1876 joined forces to become the Progressive Party, corresponding to today's left-wing progressive liberals.Footnote 4 Both liberal parties contributed to the greening of the capital by creating public spaces for the citizens, who could enjoy a more bourgeois lifestyle.
This article argues that the liberal agenda for Lisbon included not only the construction of grey infrastructure,Footnote 5 with which we are familiar from the historiography, but also green infrastructure.Footnote 6 In order to modernize the city and improve its citizens’ well-being, Lisbon City Council undertook a series of municipal reforms, including founding the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds in 1840.Footnote 7 The scope of these reforms extended beyond the urban developments generally associated with nineteenth-century urban modernization, such as the construction of grey infrastructure and architecture, industrialization, enhanced means of circulation, the growth of street life, crime and leisure, all interconnected with growth in urban populations territories.Footnote 8 This article explores the ways in which liberalism led to the inclusion of public gardens, boulevards, and tree-lined streets in modern Lisbon.
Moreover, this article argues that the construction and management of green infrastructure was the subject of internal dispute between two Lisbon City Council services – the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds and the Technical Division. Between 1840 and the 1880s, Lisbon's green urban renewal was driven both by councillors and the gardeners of the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds, who achieved an unprecedented degree of influence in Portugal.Footnote 9 Municipal gardeners displayed a deep sense of public service, and were acknowledged as experts by botanists and politicians to such an extent that they participated in decision-making processes regarding Lisbon's renewal of gardens and green grounds. In contrast, in Paris the construction of green infrastructure was led by the French engineer Jean-Charles Adolphe Alphand (1817–91).Footnote 10 However, in 1869, the arrival in Lisbon of the Portuguese engineer Frederico Ressano Garcia (1847–1911), who had studied at the École des Ponts et Chaussées, changed the course taken by the department. Garcia became head of the Technical Division in 1874, resulting in administrative solutions which reflected the developments in France, stemming from the empowerment of engineers and landscape architects to the detriment of gardeners.
This article seeks to build bridges between the urban history of science and gardens and landscape studies. Following Sven Dierig, Jens Lachmund and J. Andrew Mendelsohn, the article demonstrates how the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds represented an institution that offered a stable environment for the co-construction of science and the city, highlighting how the municipal nurseries and the construction of green infrastructure contributed to producing scientific knowledge about horticulture and botany, including its large-scale application in the city. Dierig et al. argued that urban expertise was a negotiated outcome between politicians and appointed experts. This article widens the conceptual framework put forward in Science and the City Footnote 11 in order to include gardeners alongside engineers and doctors as experts. Drawing on concepts of centre and periphery, it further demonstrates how the appropriation of the French model was the result of a succession of local negotiations, emphasizing the role of circulation and situated knowledge in the co-construction of Lisbon's green infrastructure.Footnote 12 Michèle Dagenais and Pierre-Yves Saunier claimed that ‘municipal experience should be more central to urban studies’.Footnote 13 In Lisbon, it was not a king or a landscape architect but municipal employees who had the power and ability to shape the city's green infrastructure by designing, building and maintaining it.
Recent scholarship has acknowledged the importance of experts in the history of science and of engineers in the history of technology. Historians of science have stressed the role played by experts in mediating knowledge transfer between the scientific and municipal realms and, therefore, in guiding action.Footnote 14 What has been less widely recognized is that gardeners were among these experts, participating in decision-making processes, and were agents of modernization on the ground. The history of technology has emphasized the role of engineers as harbingers of modernity, as their knowledge was considered more scientific by central and local political powers on account of their education in technical universities; they became the leading actors in the construction of grey infrastructure.Footnote 15 But this article highlights how engineers also built green infrastructure – a subject that has received scant attention from historians.Footnote 16
Finally, historical analysis of garden and landscape studies has provided a vast literature on public gardens and parksFootnote 17 as well as on boulevards, avenues and allées as a new paradigm of urban expertise.Footnote 18 However, no field of study has sufficiently focused on the municipal teams behind the introduction of public gardens and the construction of green infrastructure in nineteenth-century cities, except for the work on Alphand.Footnote 19 This article demonstrates how the liberal agenda included constructing green infrastructure as a means not only of transforming public space but also the public sphere, resulting in the cultivation of a new kind of citizen adhering to the values of the liberal bourgeoisie.
This article traces the path of six actors – two councillors, two gardeners and two engineers – and three of the great works carried out by the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds – the Estrela Garden, the Avenida da Liberdade and tree-lined streets. The departmental works took place in two stages, with the construction of the boulevard Avenida da Liberdade between 1879 and 1886 marking the transition from one phase to another. In the first phase, the gardeners had the power to make decisions, and the leading works of the department, such as the Estrela Garden, were carried out by Lisbon City Council employees. In the second phase, the French influence was stronger, and engineers replaced gardeners as the driving force behind gardens and the management of green grounds. Two councillors, with different profiles, are associated with these two phases: the agronomist Francisco Simões Margiochi, a leading figure in horticulture and gardening in Portugal, and Viscount Carriche, who was unable to cope with the rise of the French-educated Portuguese engineer, Ressano Garcia. The outcome of this struggle over gardens ended with the application of the Haussmannian administrative modelFootnote 20 in Lisbon and resulted in the closure of the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds and the integration of gardening services under the Technical Division in 1903.
The golden age of the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds: negotiated decisions between councillors and gardeners
The New Traveller's Guide of Lisbon showed how greatly the city had changed by the 1870s.Footnote 21 At that time, it was comparable to the foremost advanced European capitals with its gardens and plazas recalling Paris, Madrid or Milan.Footnote 22 Foreign visitors also highlighted these boulevards and gardens as markers of modernity. One traveller from Paris, arriving in Lisbon by train, was astonished at the busy station and rapidly growing population but was especially impressed by the boulevards radiating out from the Avenida da Liberdade and the public gardens that spanned the city in 1899.Footnote 23 Both nationals and foreigners shared the perception of the triumphant role played by gardens, walks and groves in Lisbon's modernization, enabling the stroller to benefit from its landscapes and views.
The idea of a modern Lisbon proved so successful that in 1906 the professor and writer Zacharias d'Aça published a book entitled Modern Lisbon in which he listed all ‘the progress we have made in recent times and which bring us closer to the leading nations of Europe’.Footnote 24 It was clear to contemporaries that Lisbon was undergoing a modernization process which included the construction of railway stations, modern hospitals, water supply and sanitation systems and public lighting but also the green infrastructure made up of public gardens, boulevards and tree-lined streets. It is this holistic view of modernity that has fallen beyond the scope of historiography with its tendency to emphasize circulation and acceleration in the pace of everyday life, the construction of grey infrastructure, the city's growth in population and the scale and development of industry.Footnote 25
Following the civil war (1832–34) between liberal forces and defenders of the Constitutional Charter and those defending the king's absolute powers, the victory of the liberals and the accession to the throne of Queen Maria II marked the victory of the nation and the citizen. Since the beginnings of liberalism in Portugal, several parties identified with the liberal ideology and gradually gained representation in parliament, but it was only in the 1850s that the rotating parties of the Portuguese constitutional monarchy assumed a definitive identity.Footnote 26 After 1834, the liberals were divided into two groups: one supported the 1822 Constitution and the other the 1826 Constitutional Charter that secured the king greater power than set out in the Constitution.
Nevertheless, it was clear that the country had to compensate for the decades of political turmoil since the French invasions in 1807. Efforts were focused on the attainment of the goals of equality before the law, socio-economic justice and even new standards of ‘civilization’.Footnote 27 Consequently, Lisbon City Council took upon itself responsibility for promoting the major municipal reforms that would endow the city of Lisbon with structural and civilizational improvements designed to foster citizenship.
In 1834, as soon as the liberals came to power, they carried out the first administrative reform with the direct election of municipal bodies. The first members of Lisbon City Council were elected. There were 13 councillors distributed in four areas – works, meat, administration and health. However, there was still no correspondence between a councillor and a department.Footnote 28 This reform was considered insufficient in itself to modernize Lisbon. Therefore, the reorganization of Lisbon City Council in 1840 included several new departments to deliver public services: sidewalks catered for the need to pave the city; lighting dealt with the illumination of public spaces; cleaning was for clearing away the filth and detritus that accumulated in the city due to the lack of piped water and sewage systems; water was for supplying water to the population and curbing water shortages; markets regulated the sale of food products; cemeteries managed the serious public health problem caused by the lack of proper burial sites; slaughterhouses regulated meat sales; firefighting protected property and lives, especially in the neighbourhoods composed largely of wooden buildings; health and the Hospital of S. Lázaro cared for the sick and lepers and, finally, the treasury supervised and regulated the budgets of all the other departments.Footnote 29
According to the liberal agenda, modernization of the capital was to include both grey and green infrastructure, so the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds was also established following the reorganization of the city council in 1840. This development can be compared with the progress of municipal reform in Britain, but not in France, which only embarked on similar projects in 1855.Footnote 30 However, in Britain the creation of green infrastructure was accompanied by the construction of sanitation systems (drinking water and sewage) due to the perception that the environment impacted on public health.Footnote 31 In Paris, parallel developments occurred in the 1850s–1860s, but in Portugal they were separate enterprises. Whilst the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds was founded in 1840, the sanitation system was only built in the 1860s and sewers were not provided by a private company until the 1880s.Footnote 32 The liberal idea of modernity required the embellishment of a city still struggling with the ruins left by the 1755 earthquake.Footnote 33 At this stage, greening the city was more redolent of aesthetic aspirations than public health concerns.
When it was founded, the department was responsible for the old Passeio Publico (Public Promenade). This was the first public garden in Lisbon, commissioned by the marquis of Pombal in 1764 but with paid entrance and was therefore never considered as a ‘garden for all’ by the liberals. The department also inherited the garden of São Pedro de Alcântara, begun in 1834, and the city's two groves – one on the eastern side and the other on the western side of the city. The early period of the department was characterized by a lack of substantive action – there were few gardens to care for, a small staff of around 20 workers and an allocated budget of 2.629$190 réis (the former Portuguese currency).Footnote 34 However, gardens and gardeners became increasingly important at Lisbon City Council over the next 40 years, the budget almost quadrupling in 1869 (9,571$400 réis) before peaking at 15,362$360 in 1883. At the same time, the number of employees increased tenfold from 20 to 200, while the number of gardens, public parks and green grounds under its management was constantly being expanded.Footnote 35 The department Regulation was issued by Councillor Ricardo Teixeira Duarte in 1859.Footnote 36 This stipulated in detail all the roles of the different actors involved in the department, from the gardener to the labourer, and the salaries of employees – a steward ($800 réis), tool keepers ($360 réis), porters, guards, night guards (all $300 réis), workers ($280 réis per day). A misdemeanour would incur the loss of a day's pay. The gardener (1$000 réis per day) received the highest salary and took orders directly and exclusively from the councillor, who was not paid for this position.Footnote 37 These wages were increased by similar proportions in 1874.Footnote 38 The Regulation also included rules on opening and closing the gardens, the appropriate uniforms for guards and porters, and whether animals were allowed into the gardens, as well as the respective terms and conditions.
The pioneering civilizational actions of the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds began in the Estrela Garden, which was inaugurated in 1852 (Figure 3). This garden constituted a paradigm of liberal intentions and actions, and formed a backdrop for the implementation of all technical and scientific expertise behind the reintroduction of nature into the city, to educate different audiences and morally uplift the citizen.Footnote 39 In the Estrela Garden, there was no admission fee; this was a garden for all.Footnote 40
The Estrela Garden was constructed during the Regeneration and while the Regenerator PartyFootnote 41 was in government, but other gardens and green grounds were implemented by Progressives, who could be described by today's standards as left-wing progressive liberals.
The proposal to establish a public garden in an area near to a part of the city that the court had vacated following the abolition of the religious orders in 1834 was first put forward in 1842. However, because of the political turmoil, it was postponed before its reintroduction a decade later. In 1850, a councillor was appointed exclusively to oversee the Estrela Garden construction work and answer directly to the minister of the kingdom.Footnote 42 The Estrela Garden was inspired by Gabriel Thouin's proposals presented in his Plans raisonnés de toutes les espèces de jardins (1820), the core of the French picturesque style,Footnote 43 a copy of which was held by the specialized library of Lisbon City Council. Architects from Lisbon City Council, specifically Malaquias Ferreira Leal (1778–1859) and the French gardener Jean Bonnard, who was then the king's gardener, and the municipal gardener João Francisco designed the Estrela Garden. Its lines recalled Paris’ Buttes-Chaumont park that opened in 1867; both were clearly inspired by the French picturesque style.Footnote 44
The Estrela Garden later occupied a central place in the hierarchy of the department as stipulated by the department Regulation and new management procedures for its human resources and budget, issued in 1859. Henceforth, the greenhouses, nurseries and, more importantly, the chief gardener were all concentrated at the Estrela Garden. Flowers, plants, seeds and trees were dispatched from here to other gardens, institutions, villages and cities, as well as to the colonies.Footnote 45 Moreover, at a time when public gardens were a showcase for new plants, including the introduction of exotic plants into gardens, the Estrela Garden stood out for its pioneering role in educating visitors. This resulted not only in the exhibition and dissemination of new botanical and zoological news to public audiences but also in its functional role as ‘a school of practical gardeners’.Footnote 46 As there were no formal schools for gardeners, despite some attempts to set them up, the department was the most important source of training for aspirant professional gardeners.
In 1869, the department's staff expenditure clearly conveys how the maintenance of the Estrela Garden engaged most of the department's workers, and it was the only garden allocated a permanent gardener. The Estrela Garden also received twice (82,580$ réis) the budget allocated to the older public garden built by the marquis of Pombal – the Passeio Publico (43,000$ réis) – even though its area was much smaller and correspondingly reflected the priority attributed to the former.Footnote 47 Symbolically, this encapsulated the victory of the liberals over the ancien régime.
This public garden was constructed to meet the needs of families, especially urban middle-class women with children for whom strolling and sitting on park benches had become part of everyday life.Footnote 48 These new public spaces were expected to foster and educate a new kind of citizen, more aware of their duties and rights. In 1882, the Estrela Garden was selected as the site of the first kindergarten in Portugal, the Froebel School, named after the German psychologist, Friedrich Froebel (1782–1852), who advocated that children should go to school before the age of six and should be cared for like a ‘human plant’.Footnote 49 The construction of the school was not considered a ‘luxury, but an improvement that the city required to expand the intellectual development needed to rise in civilization standard’.Footnote 50
In the 1870s, the actions of the department owed much to the capacity and vision of Francisco Simões Margiochi (1848–1904), the councillor in the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds (Figure 4). Margiochi was an agronomist and had been raised in an intellectual milieu as both his father and grandfather were famous mathematicians and members of the Academy of Sciences of Lisbon. A member of the Regenerator Party, Margiochi married the daughter of one of the wealthiest men in Lisbon and became a prominent member of urban society and politics. Margiochi was a member of the Regenerator Party but also an expert, and hence aware that specific theoretical knowledge was needed for the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds practitioners. Throughout his life, he was an advocate of agriculture and horticulture, having published regularly on these topics.Footnote 51 As the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds councillor between 1872 and 1875, he played an important role in the city's afforestation, acting as a tree expert at a time when there were no chartered arboriculturists.Footnote 52 Margiochi understood that tree planting was not solely about the city's embellishment but also about improved public health.Footnote 53 Lists of municipal nurseries as well as records of tree plantings detail the great diversity of tree species introduced to Lisbon, such as mulberry trees, acacias, ailanthus, paradise trees, Canadian poplars, weeping willows, bastard sycamores, cedar, eucalyptus from the robusta variety, ash, lotus, Judas trees, paulownias, planes, false pepper trees and elms,Footnote 54 in marked contrast with the strict variety of tree species found in other urban contexts.Footnote 55 Margiochi collected 84 publications in order to found a specialized library of garden art at Lisbon city hall, consisting of works on botany, gardening and horticulture to facilitate and hold to account the subsequent work done by the department's practitioners and other city council professionals as well as their amateur peers. The French influence was mirrored in the department's library, which contained more than 80 per cent of books published in France by French authors.Footnote 56 Margiochi founded the first study programme for gardeners and horticulturists at the Casa Pia charitable orphanage (1886–88) and became the founding president of the Royal Society of Horticulture in Portugal in the later years of his life (1898–1904).Footnote 57 During his presidency, Margiochi again sought to establish a garden study programme.Footnote 58
From its inception until roughly 1880, councillors and gardeners were involved in all the decisions regarding the greening of Lisbon. Their involvement is reflected in the status attained by municipal gardeners under the liberal regime. Before the founding of the department, the status of gardeners in Portugal in no way corresponded to that of French gardeners as garden design was determined by the patrons or architects, with the exception of some foreign gardeners working in Portugal.Footnote 59 However, within the context of the liberal urban renewal, municipal gardeners designed gardens and greenhouses, studied in the specialized departmental library, delivered lectures on botany and horticulture to amateur audiences,Footnote 60 supervised the municipal nurseries, the public gardens, the tree-lined streets and avenues, and even travelled to the Potager du Roi in Versailles to discuss horticultural issues with their fellow French professionals.Footnote 61 In order to highlight the novel status attained by municipal gardeners, two examples will be briefly explored.
Bento António Alves (1796–1878) was a municipal gardener in 1856 before leaving the department in 1859 to work for private clients such as the dukes of Palmela, about whose garden he published a leading article.Footnote 62 He had a house with a garden on S. José Street and a nursery in the surroundings of Lisbon, where he produced flowers and vegetables that he publicized by catalogue.Footnote 63 Moreover, he established a company with the French gardener Jean Bonnard to promote and sell plants produced in Portugal to national and foreign amateurs.Footnote 64 Alves was acknowledged by gardeners, naturalists and councillors as an expert. The Austrian naturalist Friedrich Martin Josef Welwitsch (1806–72) considered him the most important horticulturist of his time.Footnote 65 He was so wealthy that he was even able to donate araucaria trees to the Lisbon public gardens in 1871.Footnote 66
João Francisco da Silva spent his entire career at the department, from his apprenticeship through to becoming chief gardener. By 1853, he was already considered a professional and acknowledged by councillors as an ‘intelligent gardener’ before becoming chief gardener in the 1860s. The formal request for a rise in salary stated that not only had he been maintaining multiple gardens in Lisbon but that he had also designed them, his role corresponding to that of landscape architect. This submission stated that João Francisco needed to buy paper, inks, books and engravings to perform his professional activities properly, which was impossible on his low salary.Footnote 67 He was therefore not only a practitioner but clearly someone with ambitions to engage in the theoretical side of garden planning. Moreover, he was very aware of the public service dimension to his work. When contacted by an amateur about the opportunity for botany lessons, he immediately replied that he could not dedicate his time to the benefit of a sole individual.Footnote 68
The municipal gardeners, who had learned their skills on the job, achieved a unique status and reputation in Portugal and they actively participated in decision-making processes. In 1858, when deciding on the renovation of the Passeio Publico, which involved decisions on the planting of tree species and the methods to be followed, the city council appointed a committee composed of João Francisco, the municipal gardener, Julio Levoy Waigel, a horticulturist, Bernard, the king's gardener, P. Mourier, the gardener of the count of Farrobo, and Jacob Weiss, the Swiss gardener for the dukes of Palmela.Footnote 69 They jointly advocated a radical renovation of the Passeio Publico grove in opposition to the opinion of the forestry engineer from the Institute of Agriculture. The gardeners prevailed and their success reflected the scientific authority they had built up.
In 1879, Lisbon embarked on a major period of renewal, with renovation work beginning on the Avenida da Liberdade. Since the 1860s, opinions had been expressed in favour of opening up a wide avenue ‘continuing from the Passeio Publico to the circumvallation road’.Footnote 70 The desire to transform the Passeio Publico into something different encapsulated the need to build an important communication route, the wish to establish a comfortable and elegant carriage and horse-riding route in the French style as well as the desire to rid the city of the public garden built under the ancien régime.
In 1882, the city council appointed a committee to decide on the species of tree to be planted along the Avenida da Liberdade. Its members included the departmental councillor, the viscount of Carriche, the agronomist and former departmental councillor, Margiochi, the French gardener-in-chief of the Polytechnic School of Lisbon botanic garden, Jules Daveau, Weiss, who had also collaborated with the municipality since the 1850s, and finally the department's own gardener-in-chief, João Francisco da Silva.Footnote 71 The committee considered those species known to be well adapted to Lisbon's Mediterranean climate while also taking into account the restructuring of the Passeio Publico, which would release many trees for potential transplantation. However, aware that the theoretical precepts for planting aligned trees in urban spaces recommended cultivating only one species in keeping with the different growth rates and flowering times of different species, they chose to plant only one species on each stretch of the avenue. As the boulevard was divided into 12 plots, this determined the choice of 12 species and, correspondingly, the utilization of trees from the old Passeio Publico.
Lisbon's Avenida da Liberdade highlights how the French model of the Champs Elysée boulevard,Footnote 72 with its two rows of elms, underwent creative adoption by Lisbon City Council while also revealing how gardeners, who up until this point had participated in every decision-making process regarding the greening of the city of Lisbon, were about to be sidelined by engineers (Figure 5).
The fall of the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds: overlapping roles of councillors and engineers
The construction of the Avenida da Liberdade was an undertaking of such magnitude that its construction involved co-ordination between various Lisbon City Council technicians. This provided the opportunity to tear up the city, finally remove debris left over from the earthquake, install more comprehensive water supplies and sanitation systems as well as gas pipes for lighting the city's streets. The authorities decided that the general co-ordination of the works would fall to the council's Technical Division headed by Ressano Garcia.
Ressano Garcia was a Portuguese engineer who had studied at the Polytechnic School of Lisbon before attending the École des Ponts et Chaussées in Paris, concluding his degree in 1869 and returning to Lisbon in the same year. He was in Paris at the time of the 1867 World Exhibition, for which the main works designed by Haussmann and Alphand had already been completed. Ressano Garcia began his career in Portugal as a professor at the Industrial and Commercial Institute of Lisbon before his appointment as chief engineer by Lisbon City Council in 1874. He undertook work on the General Plan for Lisbon's urban improvement and correspondingly implemented the northward expansion of the city, starting with the construction of the main Lisbon boulevard. Moreover, he was a member of the Progressive Party and became a parliamentary member, a minister and a peer of the kingdom. The Progressive Party inherited the Historic Party in 1876. It was one of the liberal Portuguese parties, but it distinguished itself from its direct opponent, as it intended to reform the Constitutional Charter, and bring to an end the hereditary character of the Chamber of Peers, as well as establish a limit to its elements. In addition, the Progressive Party advocated the improvement of electoral reform by expanding the suffrage, changing the boundaries of the existing single-member constituencies and admitting the representation of minorities. This agenda was utterly contrary to the so-called most conservative matrix of the regenerators, for whom the Constitution should be subject to as little change as possible.Footnote 73 Although Ressano Garcia was a member of the Progressive Party, it was under a Regenerator government that the Avenida da Liberdade was built.
Following the successful construction of the Avenida da Liberdade, Ressano Garcia would lead the construction work on the marquis of Pombal plaza, the avenues radiating outwards, as well as the neighbourhoods of Campo de Ourique and Estefânia – all new areas in the north of Lisbon.
The rise of the engineer stemmed from the enormous technological progress in engineering which was transforming people's lives; railways had enabled people to travel at unprecedented speeds.Footnote 74 Moreover, with its ultimate dependence upon mathematics and the sciences, engineering conveyed an authority that knowledge acquired by practice was unable to compete with. Engineers achieved institutional and professional recognition, receiving knighthoods in Great Britain and becoming members of parliament in France and Portugal.Footnote 75 Although engineers still acquired expertise through their own practice, by continuing with the prevailing empirical tradition, engineering was envisioned as an applied science.Footnote 76 Contributing to this state of affairs were the guarantees of probity and expertise provided by the engineering schools of France, comparable even to the pedigree of engineers from the United Kingdom who had advanced the industrial revolution.Footnote 77
The disagreements between the Technical Division and the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds were various and long running. These disputes deepened during the construction of the Avenida da Liberdade as the trees and other plantings fell under the department's tutelage even while the major engineering works were under the supervision of Ressano Garcia. In 1884, an episode involving the felling of trees highlighted the dispute between the two council services, which spilled over into the courtroom and newspapers.
The Department of Gardens and Green Grounds defended its staff, claiming that they had not felled any trees, and accused the Technical Division of having chopped down various trees that might otherwise have been transplanted. The fact that they were chopped down at night only emphasized the guilt of the Technical Division as it seemed they were concealing their actions. The city council refused to accept any responsibility because in 1882 it had nominated a scientific committee to report on the best way to select and transplant trees from the Passeio Publico to the Avenida da Liberdade. However, the decisions and actions of this committee were criticized by Ressano Garcia, who disapproved of its very existence.
The establishment of this committee attracted fierce criticism, as did its subsequent decisions, which reflected the growing influence of engineers within the Technical Division and their antagonism vis-à-vis the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds. First, Ressano Garcia criticized the committee's composition by the department's councillor, the municipal gardener and three other ‘gentlemen foreign to the municipal service’.Footnote 78 Moreover, the planting of the avenue did not accord with the committee's opinions.Footnote 79 Instead, Ressano Garcia maintained that all the trees to be sourced from the Passeio Publico were to have been transplanted to a nursery, awaiting the completion of work on the avenue for later transplanting. However, this did not happen in time and the Technical Division simply decided to advance with the works. Garcia accused the department of not taking the necessary steps to enforce the committee's guidance and thus did conflicts and losses arise.Footnote 80
From 1884 onwards, Ressano Garcia's involvement in garden management brought him into conflict with the councillor for the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds, Isidoro Tomás de Moura Carvalho (1825–87), the 1st viscount de Carriche. The viscount had been departmental councillor since 1878 and would be reappointed successively until his death. On 17 January 1884, the viscount de Carriche openly questioned whether he or Ressano Garcia was in charge of overseeing the department's works.Footnote 81 The mayor asserted that the councillor always took the decisions regarding gardens and groves. The only difference was that instead of transmitting his orders to the gardener, he would hand them to an engineer in the Technical Division, who had meanwhile been given responsibility for the green infrastructure on the Avenida da Liberdade.
From 1884 on, Ressano Garcia assumed responsibility for most matters related to gardens and grovesFootnote 82 and clearly performed the duties of the departmental councillor; the boundaries between the services were permeable. By 1886, Ressano Garcia was in charge. The success attained through the construction of the Avenida da Liberdade strengthened his position on the city council both as a technician and as a politician. Therefore, the members of the new committee with powers of decision over the tender competition launched for the Park of Liberty due to be built at the top of the avenue were selected by Ressano Garcia. The committee was dominated by engineers, forest engineers and architects, and not by gardeners as in earlier periods.Footnote 83
The French landscape architect Henri Lusseau received the commission, reflecting the prestige of the new engineering professions. The difference between landscape architects and gardeners also relied on a different kind of education, acquired in an institution and not by practice.Footnote 84 However, the relationship between Lusseau and Lisbon City Council was never easy, and his project was never implemented.Footnote 85
Ressano Garcia's goals extended not only to building boulevards and parks but also to reforming Lisbon City Council itself. He strove for a Parisian style of administration. In Paris, at the Prefecture du Seine (equivalent to the Parisian city council), Haussmann appointed Alphand, an engineer who had also studied at the Parisian school, École des Ponts et Chaussées, to become head of the Department of Gardens and Promenades. Haussmann privileged engineers as he believed their technical culture and territorial management skills were crucial to implementing his vision for the municipality.Footnote 86 Following the 1859 reorganization of the Prefecture du Seine, Alphand held several services in his tutelage, and it was this ‘global and systematic’ management of urban spaceFootnote 87 that Ressano Garcia wanted to implement in Lisbon. In 1903, he succeeded in reforming the Lisbon municipal services, and garden management was transferred to the Technical Division.Footnote 88 The Department of Gardens and Green Grounds was swallowed up by the Technical Division and did not reappear until 1940.
Conclusion
This article has highlighted a less familiar aspect of the modernization of cities in the nineteenth century. In addition to the construction of grey infrastructure, the acceleration of the pace of life, the introduction of amenities such as public lighting, piped drinking water and sewage services, the construction of green infrastructure was also seen as mandatory for hygiene, public health and enrichment in order to cater for the everyday lifestyles of the urban middle classes, as in other capitals of Europe. The construction of green infrastructure was a prerogative of the liberals who, in reorganizing Lisbon City Council in 1840, established the Department of Gardens and Green Grounds, alongside other departments deemed essential to the city's modernization. The fact that the Department of Gardens’ budget was greater than that for primary education demonstrates the value attributed to this facet of the city by the liberals.
Finally, the originality of this case-study lies in the fact that the construction of green infrastructure, including the public gardens and tree-lined streets that branched out across the city, was initially in the hands of gardeners. Lisbon's municipal gardeners achieved the status of experts and were recognized as holders of special scientific and technical knowledge. They participated in all the decisions that guided such actions and were responsible for managing the entire department, answering exclusively to the councillor. However, this situation changed with the construction of the Avenida da Liberdade, the Lisbon boulevard, which took place under the supervision of an engineer trained at the École des Ponts et Chaussées. From the 1880s onwards in the construction works and in the organization of the city council's services, the French influence became ever more visible.
During the first phase, the French influence on Lisbon City Council was primarily reflected in the appropriation of the picturesque French style, through the work of the French gardener Jean Bonnard, who was already working for the king of Portugal, as well as in books such as Gabriel Thouin's Plans raisonnés de toutes les espèces de jardins (1820). However, in the second phase, it was the influence of the Parisian urban renewal carried out by Haussmann and Alphand that impacted on the council. A Portuguese engineer, who had studied at the leading Parisian school, Ressano Garcia brought technical expertise, and came to be seen as the harbinger of progress, especially following the success he achieved with the construction of the Avenida da Liberdade. However, his decision to place the gardens under the tutelage of the Technical Division and his great projects for the Park of Liberty and Campo Grande turned out to be failures. They were only completed under the Estado Novo dictatorship and the results fell far short of his initial plans. The closure of the department brought about the end of the power and influence of gardeners and the direct importance of gardens, with the dominance of engineers assured when all services were gathered under the umbrella of the Technical Division in 1903.
Acknowledgments
I thank the referees and the editor of Urban History for their comments on this article. I also thank the National Library of Portugal for the figures.
Funding Statement
This work was supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology under research projects I.P./MCTES through national funds UIDB/00286/2020.