The first meeting takes place on March 16, 1916. Eight women are the Club’s charter members.
Cool Timeline
GCH members decide that plantings on the grounds at the Connecticut School for the Deaf, then in the Asylum Hill area of Hartford on Asylum Avenue, will be their first civic project.
GCH is one of the earliest members of GCA, which was founded in 1913. Today GCA is a leader in the fields of horticulture, conservation and civic improvement.
GCH members plant a flower border at the Colonial Dames’ Webb House in Wethersfield. Other projects include beautification efforts at both the new YWCA in Hartford and the Newington Home for Crippled Children.
Tree planting and beautification efforts over several acres at Trinity College were the focus of club members in the latter 1930s. Three white oak trees were planted to commemorate the three Connecticut signers of the United States Constitution — Oliver Ellsworth, William Samuel Johnson and Roger Sherman. In all, 212 trees were planted on the campus.
GCH members enthusiastically support Victory Gardens and other war efforts — from sending seeds to England to supplying garden tools to the local 79th regiment. Garden Club members also focus attention on establishing both vegetable gardens and beautification efforts at Bradley Field, a training ground for pilots and a major embarkation point for bombers on their way to Europe.
Along with the City of Hartford and with some funding from the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, GCH works to revitalize the grounds of the Old State House in Hartford.
The Seaverns estate, once the residence of a beloved GCH member, Mrs. Charles Seaverns, had been left by the family to The Hartford College for Women. In the early 1960s, GCH members chose its restoration as their civic project. The estate, “once renowned for its rare shrubs, beautiful trees and native wild flowers,” according to the Hartford Courant, would be restored with an emphasis on “preservationof a heritage…a woodland paradise in the heart of Hartford (from the May 13, 1962 GCH minutes).
The Garden Club of Hartford sponsors a program of environmental workshops for school administrators at Connecticut State University.
The Club’s involvement at the Mark Twain House began in 1970, when several GCH members furnished the Conservatory with plant material authentic to the time of Samuel Clemens. By 1973, the Club had grander plants, voting unanimously to approve the restoration “to its original” of the grounds in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the house. By 1974, the grounds had been restored to their late 19th century grandeur.
GCH partners with the Connecticut Valley Garden Club to work once again on the Old State House grounds as part of a community effort, this time to save the building from demolition. To raise funds, the two clubs hold a tail-gate sale, a money-raising tour to England’s Chelsea Flower Show, a raffle, a silent auction, a gala event, a tag sale and a flea market. The Old State House remains standing…
In partnership with the Connecticut Valley Garden Club and the Hartford City Parks and Recreation Department, GCH members identify and label approximately 35 trees throughout Bushnell Park. The project was completed with the help of Hartford-area school children.
GCH provides funding for electricity, water and gas when Knox Parks Foundation begins to use the old Whiting Lane Greenhouses in West Hartford for community gardening. Members join with gardeners from the surrounding communities to fill the greenhouses with flats of flowers and vegetable seedlings, which are then planted out in 14 community gardens throughout the Hartford area. In partnership with the Knox Parks Foundation and the City of Hartford, and with a lot of student help, we also plant 27 trees throughout city schoolyards. We also help fund Knox Parks Foundation’s expenses for training five Hartford teachers in the indoor gardening program, including supplies, equipment and a classroom grow lab.
The trees are planted in anticipation of their blooming in time for Hartford’s 350th birthday in 1986. A plaque was placed on the northwest wall of the pond in Bushnell Park to honor GCH members.
In a joint venture with the Connecticut Valley Garden Club, GCH undertakes the compete restoration of the Sunken Garden at Farmington’s Hill-Stead Museum. The garden was originally designed by Beatrix Ferrand, and the committee followed her original plans as closely as possible, aiming for historical accuracy. This effort included the layout of the garden and paths as well as the flower selection. Garden club volunteers were responsible for researching, buying and planting of plant material. The opening of the restored garden was held on June 21, 1988.
At Pope Park, GCH provides funding for a long-range site plan for the Frederick Law Olmsted-designed park, which also enhanced the community center and swimming pool. The club provided “sweat-equity” by planting 1000 daffodil bulbs with the help of 30 children in the Pope Park Recreation Center after-school program along with shrubs and trees.
Working with the city of Hartford, GCH plans historically accurate and city-hardy plantings, refurbishes the irrigation system and installs the plantings around the newly-restored Corning Fountain.
To commemorate the Club’s 90th anniversary in 2006, members planted a variety of trees throughout Hartford. The Club also restored South Green/Barnard Park because of its importance to the neighborhood. 500 daffodils were planted at South Green with the help of elementary students from St. Cyril’s School.
GCH members collaborate with the NBMAA’s landscape firm in the garden design and choice of plant material — and then work to nurture and maintain the gardens in and around the front and cafe terraces of the new Chase Family Building and the restored Landers House.
In 2010, members pruned trees, installed new raised beds, repaired chain link fencing and extended the irrigation system at Affleck Street. We also purchased and installed a metal tool shed. At Earle Street, beginning in 2013, we constructed a hoop house, extended an irrigation system, constructed raised beds and created an open air pavilion where gardeners could take shelter and classes could be held. The garden has since been renamed the Mount Moriah Community Garden.
With a grant from the Garden Club of America’s Partners for Plants program and in collaboration with Hartford’s Department of Public Works, GCH launches a design competition for landscape architecture students. The focus is the five entrances to Keney Park – with a construction ready plan for the Barbour Street entrance. The charge is to include native plants from the Olmsteds’ original plant list, with an emphasis on pollinator-attractive species. GCH members begin mapping and monitoring endangered, rare and invasive plants at Barbour Street.
GCH celebrates 100 years of making a difference with lunch at the Governor’s Mansion, complete with a Connecticut Proclamation read by member Eunice Groark, former Lieutenant Governor. Mayor Luke Bronin read the City of Hartford proclamation and the Garden Club of America also issued a congratulatory proclamation.
2016 saw us voting for our own application — one of three that made it to this stage — in the GCA Founders’ Fund competition. With our prize of $10,000 and monies the Club raised on its own, we funded replanting the park’s five entrances, following the winning plans from the Partners for Plants at Keney Park design competition. We also underwrote several years of From the Ground Up: Best Practices in Land Management Basics, a course for City of Hartford parks employees on such fundamentals as the importance of biodiversity, plant identification, pollinator preservation and invasive plant management. And we created and installed signs at all the Keney entrances, the golf course and the cricket pitches to explain the park’s flora, fauna, landmarks and history. (See The Keney Park Project above.)
The novel coronavirus hit Connecticut in early March, and on March 23rd Governor Ned Lamont’s executive order closed all “non-essential” businesses as part of the “Stay Safe, Stay at Home” campaign. “Social distancing” became part of our vocabulary as we all learned to stay 6 feet apart, wear masks and self-quarantine. President Marian Kellner made sure the Garden Club of Hartford rose to the occasion and began holding meetings on Zoom. Garden clubs across the country did the same. The Garden Club of America’s annual meeting didn’t take place in Asheville, N.C., as scheduled, but it did happen online. The Garden Club of Hartford’s Annual Meeting took place on schedule and on Zoom. We welcomed new members, said fond farewells to one board and cheered in a new one. And felt thankful and grateful to be members of the strong GCH community as we find new ways to move forward into our future.