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The Gridley-Case Cottage Garden

A New Garden with an 18th-Century
Design,
by Peggy Bliss

Gridley-Case
Cottage Garden, 138 Main Street.
In 1999, Sarah C. la Cour, a landscape designer from Amherst, Mass., was
contracted to design the garden for the Historical Society at 138 Main Street.
Her work has been published in Traditional Gardening and in Alliance for
Historic Landscape Preservation publications. Her garden design, approved by the town Planning and Zoning Commission
and the Historic District Commission, is a
re-creation of an eighteenth-century formal design, reflecting the style and
plantings typical of New England.
Sarah's proposal contained a history of New England
gardens. Early kitchen gardens grew herbs and vegetables and were usually
maintained by the women of the household. After the Revolutionary War, seeds and
plants from around the world became available to gardeners. Gardens began
incorporating flowers and climbing vines including honeysuckle and ornamental
wisteria. Ornamental and fruit trees were popular. All were adjacent to the home
and enclosed by picket fences to protect them from wandering livestock. In the
early twentieth century, garden enclosures became more elaborate ironwork
designs. Garden beds were colorful shapes made up of perennials and roses.
Walking paths and benches allowed the viewer a quiet respite. Fountains and
statuary became popular.

The garden
in the summer of 2006.
Sarah’s intent was "to create a garden in a natural and refined setting." The
garden was designed to integrate symmetrical plantings with existing features,
such as mature shrubs and the wrought-iron fence. The design incorporated
boxwood-edged brick and bluestone walks and quadrant beds. A retaining wall was
built with funds donated by the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving.
Starting in 2005, a flower committee headed by society members Gene Goodwin, Jean Pickens and
Portia Corbett developed a list of plants and planted the quadrant beds with
perennials to provide color from May to October. Plantings included: geranium striatum, Campanula (blue), and autumn joy in the center
circle; and white phlox, Stella d'Oro lilies, red bee balm, blue columbine and
Russian sage in the quadrants. Lilacs, red bud, coreopsis and hostas were
planted above the stone wall.
The copper fountain at the center of the garden was donated by Peter Bartucca,
former president of the Historical Society, and his wife, Bobbie.

Cottage
garden in August 2008.
In June 2008, the garden was one of six homes and two museums featured in the
Friends of the Farmington Library Kitchens & Gardens Tour. The event provided an
opportunity to update the garden and finish the yard behind the society's
headquarters. As part of a volunteer UConn master gardener project, I updated
the garden by adding annuals, herbs and perennials. The perennials were labeled
so visitors to the garden could identify the plants.

Side garden at 138 and 140 Main Street.
The Treadwell list of 18th-century
plantings was used as a guide in selecting plants. John Treadwell documented
commonly found vegetables, herbs and flowers planted in Farmington gardens.
From the list, these plants were added: pinks, daffodils, tulips,
violas, blackberry lily, poppies, hollyhocks, sweet william, sweet pea, morning
glories and marigolds. Herbs added to the garden included: parsley, coriander,
pepper, savory, sweet marjoram, thyme, rue, hyssop, lemon balm, chive, tansy and
wormwood. These and lamb's ear, iris, oregano, yellow yarrow, germander and
lavender were generously donated by the Connecticut Unit of the Herb Society of
America.
We welcome volunteers who would like to work in the garden, as well as donations
of perennials.

140 Main Street.

Garden in August 2008. The Farmington Historical Society, P.O. Box 1645, Farmington, CT 06034
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