Winter Lecture 2024: Naoko Abe

Join Naoko and learn about the life of Collingwood 'Cherry' Ingram (1880-1981), the Englishman who saved Japan’s blossoms. Ingram, an eccentric Edwardian gentleman, had fallen in love with Japanese cherry blossoms at the beginning of the 20th century and went to Japan three times to bring back cuttings of many different cherry trees. By the 1940s, he had created the world’s largest cherry tree collection in his garden in Benenden, Kent. He returned an iconic white-blossomed variety called ‘Taihaku’ to Japan in 1932 where it had gone extinct. The homecoming of Ingram’s trees is continuing. In 2021, five more varieties that had gone extinct in Japan were returned from Harcourt Arboretum. They had all been preserved in Ingram’s garden. Naoko will also talk about the symbolism of cherry blossoms in Japan, including the Japanese military’s ideological distortion of cherries during the Second World War.

Naoko Abe is a UK-based journalist and non-fiction writer. Her first English-language book, ‘Cherry’ Ingram, The Englishman Who Saved Japan’s Blossoms, was published in March 2019 to critical acclaim. The book was chosen as the Book of the Week by BBC Radio 4 and received positive reviews in major publications around the world, including the Economist, the Financial Times and the Washington Post. It was chosen as one of the best books of the year by the Sunday Times and the Daily Mail in the UK and by NPR (National Public Radio) in the US. The book has been published in eight languages. The original book in Japanese won the prestigious Nihon Essayist Club award in 2016.

Naoko was the first female political reporter at the Mainichi Newspaper, one of Japan’s most influential newspapers, and has written five books in Japanese. Her new book ‘The Martyr and the Red Kimono’ will be published in England in April 2024. She has lived in the UK with her British husband since 2001.

 

 

Thursday 25 January
19:00–20:30

Naoko Abe
"Saving the blossom: Cherry Ingram and his rich legacy"

 
Thursday 8 February
19:00–20:30
Raymond Blanc
An audience with Raymond Blanc

 

Thursday 22 February
19:00–20:30
Jonathan Drori
"Around the world in 80 plants"
 
Thursday 7 March
19:00–20:30
Juliet Sargeant
"Garden stories – connecting people with landscape"
 
Tuesday 19 March
19:00–20:30
Rachel de Thame
"A wholistic approach to gardening for wellbeing and wildlife"
 

Our Winter Lecture series invites speakers from the world of horticulture, botany and beyond.
All talks take place in the Lecture Theatre at Oxford University's Museum of Natural History, Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3PW (directions).
Tickets are £20 or £80 for all five talks. These lectures are live only events and will not be recorded.
A drinks reception will take place after the lecture from 20:00 until 20:30 in the beautiful surrounds of the Museum. Alcoholic and non-alcoholic options will be available.
Tickets are available until the week before the event. 
Book your place here.