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NGE >> Land and Resources >> Environment >> Education and Research >> Gardens, Nature Centers, and Zoos >> Callaway Gardens |
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Callaway Gardens Callaway
Origins While picnicking near their home one day in the summer of 1930, Cason Callaway, a textile manufacturer, and his wife, Virginia, a knowledgeable horticulturist, came upon a bright, orange-red azalea.
Callaway cleared fields, moved rocks, and built dams along the creeks to create lakes, and he constructed a nine-hole golf course. Within a few years, the basic patterns of lakes, woodlands, flower trails, and golf courses were laid out. Virginia Callaway worked with the landscape architects Gilmore Clark and John Leon Hoffman to plant more than 20,000 new trees and shrubs, including many native flowering varieties. In May 1952
Before his death in 1961, Callaway approved designs for a chapel. Built of fieldstone and arched timbers hewn from surrounding fields, the chapel is located beside a natural waterfall at the head of a small lake. The well-known minister and inspirational speaker Norman Vincent Peale dedicated the chapel, which remains a place for quiet reflection, weddings, and organ concerts. After his father's death, Howard "Bo" Callaway oversaw the gardens until he launched his failed campaign in 1966 to become the first Republican governor of Georgia since Reconstruction (1867-76). He left again in the 1970s to serve as secretary of the army under U.S. presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford and then to develop Crested Butte Mountain Resort in Colorado. He and his wife, Beth, moved back to Georgia in the 1990s to help with the gardens' operations. Legacy Callaway
The management of Callaway Gardens has gradually been moving the site away from its automobile focus; instead, trolleys are available for touring the gardens, and extensive hiking and biking trails connect the attractions. Cason Callaway once told a visitor to the gardens, "What I'm trying to do here is hang the picture a little higher on the wall for the people of this region. Every child ought to see something beautiful before he's six years old—something he will remember all his life. And there hasn't been too much beauty in this part of the country in the past." Suggested Reading Howard H. Callaway, The Story of a Man and a Garden, Cason Callaway and Callaway Gardens (New York: Newcomen Society, 1965). Kaye Lanning Minchew, Troup County Archives Published 2/3/2006 |
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