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In the aftermath of the tornado |
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Showcase Garden
Grace Episcopal Church Garden,
Mt. Meigs, Alabama
By Andy Scott
I am deeply gratified to
see Grace Episcopal Church in Mt. Meigs, Alabama featured
as a showcase garden. My father Jim Scott planned and built the garden in honor of his parents, John and Ellie
Scott.
History of the church: Grace
Church was built in the 1890's in the
carpenter gothic style at Mt. Meigs, a country cross-roads
outside
Montgomery. For most of its history, the parish consisted
of only the
one-room church itself, which holds about 70 people.
Set amidst pine
forests and cotton fields, it had a beaten-dirt parking
lot out front
and a dusty graveyard behind. When I was growing up,
it was a rare
Sunday when the church was more than half-full. Most
parishioners were
related to me.
What we lacked in numbers,
however, we made up in eccentricity. For
example, my great aunt was not only the organist but
was also a
motorcycle enthusiast. On Sundays, this elderly women
dressed in
Episcopalian liturgical finery -- red and white embroidered
organist's
robes -- jammed a helmet on her head, and motorcycled
to church, robes
whipping behind her.
It was perhaps this eccentric
spirit that made my father look out the
window during a service one day in 1975 and decide that
what the place
really needed was a fine English-style garden. Grace
Church was not a
likely candidate for such refinement. The church did
not have air
conditioning, and the acolyte (me) regularly fainted
during summer
services. There was a bee-hive in the walls. Honey oozed
into the church
beside the altar, and bees occasionally got loose inside
and attacked
the priest. In the winter, the ancient open-flame gas
space heaters
singed your clothes if you sat too close to the end
of a pew.
Nevertheless, Dad began work on the garden.
History of the gardens:
Over the years Dad walled off an area in front of the
church and coaxed
a lawn to grown in the former dirt parking lot. He planted
stands of
azaleas and rimmed the church with flower beds. He built
secret patios
and fountains and meandering brick paths in the deep
woods behind the
church. And, in the eccentric spirit of the place, he
built a big tree
house, reached by a sweeping staircase, in oaks in the
front yard.
Partly because of these transformations
and partly because Montgomery
was spreading towards Mt. Meigs, the church began to
grow. It got its
first full-time priest. Services began to fill up, and
a second Sunday
service was added. It added a parish house. The church
and its gardens
became popular for weddings (some conducted in the tree
house). Perhaps
for the first time in its history, the church was thriving.
In 1996 a tornado made a
direct hit on the church and knocked down
dozens of old-growth trees. There were so many trees
down that the
church was invisible from the road. Although huge pines
and oaks lay
scattered like pick-up sticks and one tree leaned against
the church --
making the wall bow in by several feet -- amazingly,
neither the church
nor the parish house sustained major damage. The gardens,
however, were
wrecked.
Downed trees knocked over
brick walls and rooted up paths. The wind
shredded ornamental plants. The tree house and the oaks
that held it
were kindling. And, of course, the thick canopy of trees
that was one
the garden's crowning glories was gone entirely. Over
several weeks the
congregation cleared away the trees in front of the
church with cranes
and logging equipment. The fallen trees behind the church
were
inaccessible, however, because the graveyard prevented
heavy machinery
from getting into position.
The solution? An anonymous
donor arranged for International Paper's
logging helicopter to fly up from the Gulf Coast. This
helicopter spent
two days ferrying huge sections of trees over the top
of the church and
out to surrounding fields. It gently plucked up the
tree that leaned
against the church, and the church groaned and popped
back into
position, no worse for wear.
Undeterred, Dad rebuilt the
walls and the paths but revamped the garden
from a shade garden to an open-sun garden. Today, there
is no evidence
of the destruction. And the church continues to grow.
It has just
finished a new, much bigger parish house, although all
services are
still held in the original sanctuary. Visitors are welcome,
but arrive
early to get a seat.
As for the present state
of the garden, I defer to Robert
William Gooding's excellent description.
Andy Scott
Previous Showcase
Gardens:
Grace
Episcopal Church Garden by Robert William Gooding
Wave
Hill
Opus
40
Stonecrop
Gardens
Joan
Treis, Woodmere Wildflower Garden
John
Guglielmelli, San Francisco
Sunshine
Farm & Gardens
Melissa
Clark, Chevy Chase
Longhouse
Reserve

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