












|
|
The Montgomery Branch of
the APVA
asked The Garden Club of Virginia
to restore the Smithfield landscape in 1982, a project that took until
1984 to complete and dedicate. Rudy J. Favretti was the landscape
architect. In recreating the landscapes, he took great care to maintain
the simplicity of an 18th century frontier plantation to provide an
educational
experience for visitors.
Research
revealed that the house sat in a tightly enclosed yard along with
pertinent
outbuildings, and that it undoubtedly contained a garden. From
archaeological
evidence by infrared photography, by excavation and by study of Preston
family documents, it was determined that there were two smokehouses, a
distillery, an outer yard, and an inner garden. The exact site of the
garden
was not found.
Just as today, the
manor
house sat within a fenced yard. The outer yard was for protection
and used by grazing animals. The area between the plantation
house
and the rebuilt smokehouse
was selected for the demonstration garden, where displays of flowers,
herbs
and small fruits could be grown. The smokehouse has been reconstructed
on its original site. The plant material represents food crops as well
as plants used for flavoring, fragrance, healing, weaving and
dying.
This garden does not pretend to show an authentic 18th century layout
but
rather to demonstrate authentic 18th century plants. The central paved
area in the garden suggests a work space where soap and candle making,
and cloth dying might have taken place. The drying yard, as many
early gardens, had a grass area on which to lay clothes and other
textiles
for sun bleaching.
The
garden is enclosed by a weathered paling fence, typical of the
era.
Small fruits such as grapes, strawberries, raspberries, and
gooseberries
grow along the rear garden fence. Other
fence examples on site are the Virginia rail fence around the perimeter
of the property and a stockade fence, one of the earliest and most
primitive
types, made of pointed logs set in the ground. These fence types
were used on the frontier landscape. The outer yard is a simple
landscape
with grass and trees, suggesting a yard on which sheep grazed and fowl
scratched. Maple trees encircle the yard as they might have in the
early
history of Smithfield. Toms and Stroubles Creek supplied water with a
millrace
on the western side of the house.
Some of the
authentic plants
in the garden were mentioned in Preston family documents. The family
letters
from several generations revealed an extensive variety of plant
material
grown at Greenfield, Smithfield, Solitude and Horseshoe Bottom:
included
were aloes, barley, bluegrass, buckwheat, cabbage, Carolina pinks,
Charlie
Rue, clover, corn, Devil’s Bit, flax, grass seed, hemp, horseradish
roots,
indigo, ironweed, lobelia, New River grass seed, oats, peas, potatoes,
rye, timothy, tobacco, turnips, and wheat. The list includes
several
varieties of fruit and shade trees: nine varieties of apples, pear,
peach,
quince, pecans, English walnut, apricots, cherries, plums, Mulberry,
and
finally, Sugar Maples and locusts.
 
The gardens and grounds
are maintained
by dedicated members of the Montgomery Branch of the APVA.
Interested members meet Wednesdays from 8:30 to 11:30am for planting,
weeding,
and visiting. Please join us!
|
|