1929 to 1989 The society was founded in 1929.
Sir William Lawrence, who was at the time the treasurer of the
Royal Horticultural Society, first suggested creating a "rock garden society" in June 1929. The first general meeting was held on 10 December 1929, when the name was changed to its present one, as its principal purpose was to encourage the cultivation of alpine plants. Lawrence became the society's first president. Within five months, on 5 April 1930, the society held its first show, a tradition which has continued since. Exhibitors compete for awards, including the Sewell Medal and the Farrer Memorial Medal, introduced in 1931. Non-competitive displays have been included from 1931 onwards. The
Bulletin contained (and continues to contain) articles of various kinds, including reports of the Society's shows, information on cultivating plants which fall within the society's remit, and accounts of such plants in the wild. Photography was an important aspect of the
Bulletin, initially confined to black-and-white, such as the picture of
Ramonda myconi (then called
R. pyrenaica) in the second
Bulletin. Although there were earlier experiments with colour printing, colour was not used in earnest until 1984. In later years, the Society supported the publication of more overtly scientific works, such as the monograph on the genus
Daphne by
Christopher Brickell and
Brian Mathew. A subsidiary of the society, AGS Publications, was set up and had a turnover of more than £70,000 by 1989. One of the society's early scientific activities was evaluating plants which fell within its scope for their suitability for cultivation and their merits when cultivated. The society alone first issued the award of Certificate of Merit and Botanical Certificate in 1933. The
Royal Horticultural Society regarded itself as the legitimate UK body to make such awards, and in 1936, a joint committee was set up, affectionately known as the "Joint Rock" (officially the Joint Rock Garden Plant Committee), which makes awards such as the
Award of Garden Merit (AGM). Another activity with a scientific flavour introduced in 1936 was the three-day international conference. Local secretaries were first introduced in 1936, which later resulted in local groups, affiliated to the main AGS, but allowing a limited number of people to join the local group but not the main AGS. In 1954, founder member,
Dorothy Renton, took the
Royal Horticultural Society's
Veitch Memorial Medal for her work in developing a garden in Scotland. ==References==