One Writer's Garden
In Jackson, Mississippi, preservationists are restoring the verdant retreat that sustained novelist Eudora Welty
- By Wendy Mitman Clarke
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Haltom, in consultation with Welty, started digging up old borders lined in concrete rubble and stone, revealing original plants like the 1920s day lilies and some of the camellias, finding remnants of Chestina's rose garden. Haltom pored over photographs Welty provided—the writer, also an accomplished photographer, had documented the garden from the roof in the 1930s. Haltom also consulted historic-garden specialists, researching plants grown at the time and locating cultivars from that period. "I can't go put in modern pansies or cosmos and think they're going to look the same," she says. "So I have to search out the actual plants that were grown then." The bearded irises on the perennial border, for instance, are pre-1945 cultivars donated by the Historic Iris Preservation Society.
After Eudora's death at 92 in 2001, Mary Alice White found Chestina's 1930s gardening journal, and there it was—the garden layout, complete with plant names and locations. And White and Haltom continue to find more details in Eudora Welty's letters and notes. "Sometimes she would write someone and say, 'I just ordered a General George Washington,' or whatever," Haltom says. "It's so much fun. It's a treasure hunt. And I'm not only trying to find the clues as to what they are, I'm trying to locate them in nurseries and to find out if anyone still grows them, and I'm propagating these for the future."
The garden opened to the public in April 2004 (the house is not scheduled to open until April 2006), and though lovely, it's still a work in progress, true to its original intent. It's a place of bent backs and dirty knees, where what one is seeking is not perfection or distance, but an honest view of real life—a view the writer who loved this garden was so gifted at giving the rest of the world.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments