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                                               Intro Mary Garden

Medieval Countryside in a Garden

John S. Stokes Jr. . Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady, 1937 In 1933 landscape architect, Dorothea R. Harrison, of Boston accepted a most unusual commission. Frances Crane Lillie of Chicago and Woods Hole engaged her to design a 40 ft. x 40 ft. "Garden of Our Lady" on the grounds of the stone Angelus Tower donated to St. Joseph's Church in Woods Hole three years earlier. It was Mrs. Lillie's desire to have a public garden of pleasing proportion and color composed entirely of a wide selection of flowers from the English countryside which had old common names of pre-Reformation origin recalling Our Lady, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and of other religious association. These flowers were to be selected from an initial list of 61 flowers Mrs. Lillie had published a year before in a leaflet, "Our Lady in Her Garden", when she made a planting of a few of these flowers herself at the Angelus Tower, before a sculptured outdoor figure of the Virgin executed by V. M. S. Hannell. From her own planting, Mrs. Lillie quickly discovered that many of the flowers on her list were unavailable through ordinary horticultural sources, and that of those which were indeed available many were difficult to cultivate, or had blooms which were insignificant or of very short duration, under Cape Cod growing conditions. Miss Harrison's challenge was, thus, to design a garden which was attractive and horticulturally feasible from a selection of largely unfamiliar and difficult to procure plant materials. But it was more that this. It was also to provide a setting in which one or more of the plants of each species would have sufficient accessibility and surrounding space so that they could be viewed distinctly, with all the individuality desired by a botanist or wild flower artist or photographer. This was because a primary purpose of the Garden of Our Lady was to enable the visitor to experience directly and immediately the striking religious symbolism of the plant flowers and foliage, evoked by their old names, with the help of a posted planting plan and list, and plant markers, giving these names. Mrs. Lillie wished the garden visitor to re-experience the startling impact of the plant symbolism she had experienced a few years before when shown the plants in British monastery gardens, and especially when viewing the woodcut illustrations in The Mary Calendar (Judith Smith, St. Dominic's Press, Ditchling, England, 1930), the source of most of the plants on her original list. Thus, the symbolism of Our Lady's Cushion (Armeria maritima foliage), Our Lady's Thimble (Campanula rotudifolia blooms), Madonna's Pins (Geranium maculatum seed pods), Virgin Mary's Candle (Verbascum thapsus bloom stalk) and Our Lady's Tears (Tradescatia virginiana moist pendant spent blooms) and the other plants was to be clearly apparent through easy access. To assist Miss Harrison in her task, Mrs. Lillie enlisted the aid of an academic friend, Winifred Jelliffe Emerson of Chicago, to undertake an exhaustive research into old herbals, garden books and plant dictionaries to discover as many Flowers of Our Lady as possible from the popular religious traditions of the English countryside. In this she accepted the authority of the Oxford English Dictionary that the words "Lady", "Lady's and "Ladies" in the older English plant names are almost invariably foreshortenings of "Our Lady" and refer to the Blessed Virgin Mary. In the five years Miss Harrison worked on this project, this and other research, including her own, uncovered several hundred English Flowers of Our Lady, but a large number of them were horticulturally unavailable, difficult or otherwise unsuitable wildflowers. Since flower gardening and the printing of gardening books in England had their impetus largely after the Reformation - with its prohibition of veneration of the Virgin Mary - very few of the many newer, introduced, flowers now cultivated in English gardens were given common names extending the pre-Reformation tradition of associating flowers with the Virgin, as occurred in the unbroken German and Spanish Catholic cultures, and newly in Latin America. Accordingly, most of the old English Mary-names of flowers, as we know them today, have come to us by way of the surviving oral traditions of the countrysides, recorded through the research of botanists and folklorists. Hence the paucity of familiar garden subjects in the Lillie English research. To meet the requirement of designing a Garden of Our Lady of plants associated with Mary in pre-Reformation English rural and monastic traditions, Miss Harrison decided to compose a garden incorporating one or more clumps or groups, of four to six plants each, of some 40 or 50 species or varieties, in over-all proportionate arrangement, taking into consideration dispersed continuity of bloom within a pleasing arrangement of foliage. After deciding upon a cross-shaped central bed as a setting for the focal Hannel sculpture, with an enclosing border of matching contours, and a single entrance, she then introduced unity into the otherwise diverse foliage and bloom pattern through a dispersal of roses and lilies throughout the various clumps of plants. Roses and lilies had been traditionally planted in Benedictine monastery gardens or Rosaries going back to St. Benedict's own rose garden, and were associated with the Virgin through the figurative titles applied to her by the Church fathers of "Rose of Sharon", "Lily-of-the-Valley" and "Lily among the Thorns" from the Song of Songs. Within this general tradition, and with Mrs. Lillie's concurrence, Miss Harrison considered it entirely appropriate, in the over-all conception of the garden, to include a variety of contemporary roses and lilies developed for fuller and longer blooms. The use of contemporary strains and hybrids also illustrated the marvel, as Pope Pius XII later expressed it to a group of rose growers assembled in Rome in 1955, that: "Through the thousands of years of his history, man has cultivated the vast garden of God, not only to maintain it, but also to improve it. Yes, truly, God permitted man to improve his work. Such is the admirable delicacy of our heavenly Father, who calls his children to enter into such intimate collaboration with him. Is this not also your privilege, who unceasingly seek to create new varieties of roses, with new shapes and colors?" In addition to six rose and four lily varieties, Miss Harrison incorporated twenty-six indigenous Flowers of Our Lady of the pre-Reformation English countryside, or their close equivalents; seven Mary-plants from other countries introduced in pre-Reformation English monastery gardens; and also five plants introduced in post-Reformation gardens, associated with Mary - to provide more blue and white, her emblematic colors. The latter included petunias; hosta (Assumption Lilies, from their bloom around the Feast of the Assumption, August 15th); and Japanese iris (as substitutes for indigenous shorter blooming English yellow flag iris, symbol of Mary's sword of sorrow, and of her heavenly queenship). She also substituted a New World marigold, Tagetes erecta, for the indigenous English corn marigold, Chrysanthemum segetum, or the introduced garden or pot marigold, Calendula officinalis. Petunias, also were seen in Germany as "Mary's Praises", evidently from their up-facing flowers. Pansies, "Our Lady's Delight" - also "Trinity Flower" from their three colors - symbolized Mary's rejoicing in God, her Savior; marigolds, "Marygolds", symbolized her heavenly glory; and cup or chalice-like flowers, such as the lily and tulip, her reception of divine grace. The scope of German flower symbolism of Our Lady came to be more fully appreciated outside Germany through the publication in 1956 and 1957 of the index of Marzell's Deutsches Worterbuch Der Pflanzennamen (Leipzig, 1937-1979). Miss Harrison conceived of the planting of the center, cross-shaped, bed as a flowery meade, with three varieties of thyme, and teuchrium, prominent in the four arms of the cross - producing dramatic color in May and June, and bloom continuity through the summer. Also, for color she used forget-me-not (Eyes of Mary) and harebell (Our Lady's Thimble), which, like pansies, are long-blooming in the Woods Hole seaside climate, if kept moist. A bower in the rear border bore climbing morning glory (Our Lady's Mantle) and clematis (Virgin's Bower). In 1938, the year after Miss Harrison completed her work, making revisions each year on the basis of plant growth and blooming experience, the entire planting was destroyed by hurricane, and subsequently only partially restored. After another hurricane, in 1944, a second restoration was made, largely of petunias, marigolds and alyssum, typical of summer gardens in the area, with abandonment of the original plan and plant markers. It wasn't until the Centennial of St. Joseph's Church in 1982, which was also the 50th Golden Jubilee of the Garden, that the Garden of Our Lady was fully restored according to Miss Harrison's final, 1937, "Plan #10" - thanks to the rediscovery of the plan in the archives of the Woods Hole Historical Society by Jane A. McLaughlin, Parish Historian, in the course of doing research for a commemorative history she was writing for the centennial. Through an article, "Lillie Tower", by Rev. James J. Galvin, C.SS.R. in l947, based on a 1942 visit to the garden, the writer and Edward A. G. McTague undertook further research into the old religious names of plants and founded the Mary's Gardens center in Philadelphia, Pa. to assist in the planting of other Mary Gardens, based on the inspiration of the Woods Hole Garden - with the blessing of Mrs. Lillle. In 1952 we corresponded extensively with Miss Harrison about the development of the garden, and in July of that year we met at the garden with her, and also with Wilfrid L. Wheeler distinguished horticulturalist and nurseryman, and Mrs. Lillie's brother-in-law who had built the Angelus Tower and dug the original garden beds, and who still oversaw the maintenance of the Garden for Mrs. Lillie, who was then an invalid. Plans were made at that time to restore the original garden planting by stages, but this was set back by another hurricane in 1955. After the death of Mrs. Lillie and of Mr. Wheeler, we assisted, in 1961, in a partial restoration of the Garden undertaken by Mrs. Lillie's cousin, Mrs. George Gigger, and Nelson Cahoon, which was maintained by Mr. Cahoon up to the time of the 1982 full restoration. At the present time basic soil maintenance, spring cultivation, lawn cutting, hedge trimming and winter protection are taken care of professionally, thanks to a tower and garden maintenance trust fund established by Mrs. Lillie. Special plant procurement and daily care are undertaken, in weekly rotation, by members of the St. Joseph's Parish Mary Garden Society and other volunteers. The unusual variety of plant species, their proportioned composition, and their daily maintenance give the garden a unique quality which makes it immediately apparent to the visitor that this is a special place of love. A supply of leaflets and article reprints available to visitors in the attractive small room in the base of the Angelus Tower beside which the garden is planted provide a planting plan; lists of plants with their religious, common and horticultural names; and historical background information. Since Mary's Gardens was founded in Philadelphia in 1951, numerous articles and news stories, together with literature provided to garden visitors in Woods Hole, have resulted in over 30,000 inquiries about Mary Gardens from throughout the United States and many other countries. On invitation, Mrs. Bonnie Roberson of Hagerman, Idaho displayed a miniature replica of her renowned Mary Garden at the 1962 annual meeting of The Herb Society of America in Washington, D.C.. An exhibit Mary Garden designed by Mrs. Martha Ludes Garra for the 1968 Philadelphia Flower Show received a special award of merit. In 1983 a large Mary Garden was planted at Our Lady's Shrine in Knock, County Mayo, Ireland - perhaps the major Marian shrine in the English speaking world, and visited by over one million pilgrims annually. As a truly national Irish Mary Garden, it gives a special place to over 30 plants bearing the old Gaelic name for Mary, "Muire" - planted with other indigenous Irish plants named for Mary in English through Anglo-Norman influence. Two species of Flowers of Our Lady are being provided from each of the 32 counties of Ireland, as found growing indigenously. Also, a collection of thirty-eight "Plants of the Virgin Mary" has been established in the Cloister Garden of Lincoln Cathedral in England, "to make sure that the legends linking the Mother of Christ with growing things are not forgotten and lost to posterity." It is hoped that with this beginning, numerous Mary Gardens will be established in England, wherein the British love of flowers and gardening will devise beautiful plantings of full complements of pre-Reformation Flowers of Our Lady, in fulfillment of Mrs. Lillie's vision, so admirably first given substance by her and Miss Harrison in Woods Hole in the 1930's. Copyright, Mary's Gardens, 1984