Page 27 - Allison's Magazine ~ Issue #99
P. 27

THE WELL-KNOWN ARCHITECT FRANK
                                                                                Lloyd Wright, who knew a thing or two
                                                                                about nature, once said, "Study nature,
                                                                                love nature, stay close to nature. It will
                                                                                never fail you."

                                                                                Wright had a kindred spirit in a
 LONGWOOD’S                                                                     seemingly unlikely ally: Pierre S.
                                                                                du Pont, one of the top industrialists in
                                                                                American history. Du Pont graduated
 LEGACY                                                                         with a chemistry degree from MIT,
                                                                                became a chemist, and then became a
                                                                                wildly successful businessman, running
 written by matthew brady
 photography by longwood gardens                                                both the DuPont Company and
                                                                                General Motors.


                                                                                Du Pont was also passionate about
                                                                                horticulture. So when he got wind that
                                                                                Peirce’s Park, a well-known arboretum
                                                                                in his hometown of Kennett Square,
                                                                                Pennsylvania, was being sold for lumber,
                                                                                he stepped in to purchase the 202 acres
                                                                                to save the trees—and began creating a
                                                                                new legacy called Longwood Gardens.

                                                                                “Mr. du Pont was a man ahead
                                                                                of his time,” says Patricia Evans,
                                                                                communications director for Longwood
                                                                                Gardens. “He went to all the world’s
                                                                                fairs to see all the newest technology
                                                                                and always brought those ideas back
                                                                                to Longwood. Because he viewed the
                                                                                gardens not only as a place of beauty but
                                                                                also as a place to entertain his friends
                                                                                and wow his guests, he was innovative
                                                                                everywhere in the gardens.”


                                                                                Du Pont dedicated decades to creating
                                                                                and improving Longwood, designing
                                                                                many of the garden displays himself.
                                                                                In 1907, his first display, the Flower
                                                                                Garden Walk, was completed, followed
                                                                                in 1914 by the gardens’ Open Air
                                                                                Theatre. In 1921, du Pont finished
                                                                                perhaps his greatest masterpiece,
                                                                                Longwood’s Conservatory—a four-acre
                                                                                perpetual indoor flower garden, the





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