Go to Home Page
                                               Intro Mary Garden
                                               Mary Garden Jubilee

Coming Mary Garden Jubilee

QUEEN May-June, July-Aug, 1982 John S. Stokes, Jr. . Garden of Our Lady, Woods Hole - Simplified Planting, 1965 Fifty years ago, what is believed to be the first public Mary Garden in history was planted on the lawn of the Angelus Tower of St. Joseph's Church, Woods Hole, on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The Woods Hole "Garden of Our Lady" was unique in that it incorporated in its planting over forty of the symbolical Flowers of Our Lady from the medieval folk traditions of the countrysides, to bring the idealized Mary Gardens of Renaissance religious painting into the domain of contemporary flower gardening and Marian devotion. A 1946 article about the Garden of Our Lady by priest-poet, James J. Galvin, C.SS.R., provided the inspiration for the project, Mary's Gardens, of Philadelphia, founded by Edward A. G. McTague and the writer, which has been promoting the planting of Mary Gardens internationally since 1951, with headquarters moved to Hagerman, Idaho, 1968 to 1982 under the direction of a third partner since 1962, Bonnie Roberson. This year, 1982, for its golden jubilee, the Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady is being fully restored according to its originally developed planting plan for the first time since destruction of the planting by a hurricane in 1938. The restoration has been prompted by the rediscovery of the garden's historical uniqueness and significance by the parishioners in the course of research undertaken for the writing of a commemorative history for the centennial of St. Joseph's Parish - being celebrated on June 26th of this year. St. Joseph's was the first Catholic parish in its area with original boundaries extending to Hyannis, and including Nantucket Island. St. Joseph's Garden of Our Lady was conceived and donated by Frances Crane Lillie of Chicago, a summer resident of Woods Hole, where her husband, Dr. Frank R. Lillie, was President and Director of the Marine Biological Laboratory. Mrs. Lillie provided the garden as an adjunct to the Angelus Tower she had donated for St. Joseph's Church several years earlier, and which was blest and dedicated to St. Joseph by the Auxiliary Bishop of Fall River in a formal procession from the church and a ceremony at the tower on July 31, 1930. A convert to Roman Catholicism in the 1920's, under the mentorship of Baron Friedrich Von Hugel, Mrs. Lillie was highly zealous in her new-found faith and clearly conceived of the Angelus Tower and Garden of Our Lady as a religious statement and summons to the scientists and students at the Marine Biological Laboratory, directly across Woods Hole's Eel Pond from St. Joseph's Church. To this end, the two bells of the tower, cast in England, were inscribed with the names of Mendel and Pasteur, honoring these two Catholic pioneers of genetics and of bacteriology, and bore the further inscriptions, "I will teach you of life and of life eternal" and "Thanks be to God". After the dedication ceremony, the bishop gave a short homily at the church on the relation between religion and science, followed by benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. At the base of the tower was a small room, resembling a medieval monastic oratory or scriptorum, with stained glass windows, miniature Stations of the Cross circling the walls, and a library of Catholic and other books of the highest intellectual calibre of which over one hundred were still there in 1952, when they were catalogued. On the bronze tower door were scenes from the life of St. Joseph, executed by artist, Alfeo Faggi. It was in the lawn extending some sixty feet to the east of the tower that Mrs. Lillie established the twenty-foot-square garden, with adjacent wooden chairs for those who would like to rest or read. Evidently it was in considering what kind of garden would be an appropriate complement to the tower and oratory that she recalled the symbolical Flowers of Our Lady, of which she had learned in England, and conceived the idea of planting them as a Garden of Our Lady. To provide a focal figure for the garden she commissioned artist, V. M. S. Hannell, to execute an original sculptured concrete figure of the Virgin, as she might have been standing at the moment of the Annunciation - proclaimed by the thrice-daily ringing and praying of the Angelus. In a printed leaflet listing for visitors the old religious names of flowers along with their present-day familiar names, Mrs. Lillie referred to the sculptured figure, the symbolical flowers and the garden, together, as "Our Lady in Her Garden " In developing the Garden of Our Lady, Mrs. Lillie drew upon the flowers listed in "The Mary Calendar" by Judith Smith. Then she interested an academic friend, Winifred Jelliffe Emerson, of Chicago, in undertaking an extensive research of the old religious names of flowers as recorded in English botanical, folklore and linguistic studies. From this research, she then selected the sixty-one plants of particular symbolic richness listed in the leaflet, and began to plant the garden in 1932. Among the flowers were Virgin Flower, Madonna Lily, Our Lady's Slipper, Our Lady's Bedstraw, Eyes of Mary, Our Lady's Fingers, Madonna's Pins, Purification Flower, Cross Flower, The Virgin's Tears, Assumption Lily, Mary's Gold, Ladder to Heaven, Our Lady's Mantle and Trinity Flower. Finding that many of these English wildflowers were difficult to obtain, or had special requirements for garden cultivation, Mrs. Lillie engaged landscape architect Dorothea K. Harrison of Boston in 1933 to make a horticuturally more appropriate selection from among the symbolical flowers of Mrs. Emerson's growing research list of by now several hundred species, and to design a formal Mary Garden for planting around the Hannell sculpture, which was placed in a central cross-shaped bed. The actual planting, which also included a number of symbolical flowers from Mrs. Harrison's own research, was made under the supervision of renowned Cape Cod builder and nurseryman, Wilfred Wheeler, Mrs. Lillie's brother-in-law, who had served as first Agricultural Commissioner of the State of Massachusetts and had built the Angelus tower, designed by a Boston firm of architects. After the years of revisions, a final plan, "Plan #10," of forty-seven flower varieties, was arrived at in 1937, by which time Mrs. Emerson's research list of plants had grown to include five hundred Flowers of Our Lady from which to choose. It was the following year that the garden planting was totally destroyed by a hurricane, after which only a partial restoration of plant varieties was made. Then, after destruction a second time by hurricane in 1944, a replanting was made with a conventional selection of a few varieties of flowers commonly cultivated in summer gardens in the area, and the originally posted list of the plants - giving their old names and explaining the background of their symbolism - was abandoned. However, through Fr. Galvin's articles about the garden, based on a 1942 visit, and the subsequent interviews of Edward A. G. McTague and the writer with its founders, the idea of the garden has been kept alive for a new blossoming in this year's restoration under the initiative of parishioners of St. Joseph's. Moreover, in the course of thirty years of extensive research into the folklore, floral art and gardens of medieval and Renaissance England, Ireland, France, Germany, the Low Countries, Spain and Latin America by Mary's Gardens, we have found the Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady to be of far greater historical importance than we originally recognized. We fully expected that our research would uncover records of numerous Mary Gardens from which we could obtain additional flower symbolism, plans and descriptions of specific gardens, and information as to their origins and history. Our actual findings were very different. We found over one thousand flowers with names symbolical of Mary from botanical and folklore sources, but no records of gardens of such flowers. The "Mary Gardens" of Renaissance religious art were found to be ideally conceived, rather than based on actual gardens. A Mary Garden reported as existing at Melrose Abbey in Scotland likewise appeared to be imaginatively envisaged, as an embellishment of a documented historical report that the abbot and some of the monks there had private gardens. An oft-cited "S. Mary's Garden" mentioned in the accounting records of Norwich Cathedral Priory is believed to have been a traditional monastic rose garden or "rosary " Mrs. Lillie told us she herself knew of no actual other Mary Gardens, but "did not think I was doing anything unusual", in planting the Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady. However, this garden may have been the first garden to be planted entirely with symbolical flowers of the countrysides. It was possibly also unique as a public garden expressly planted to be of itself a votive offering to Mary rather than as a setting or landscaping for her statue or shrine. And in this it was also distinct from the traditional monastery and church sacristan's gardens which, while often dedicated to Mary were established pimarily to provide flowers for use and offering elsewhere: at churches, shrines, images, processions, festivals and crownings. As Mrs. Lillie described it, it was "her garden", Our Lady's Garden - making it a very special kind of place and making all the work of caring for it, with all the thoughts and meditations evoked by its symbolism and beauty, potentially a very special kind of prayerful work. In this prayerful atmosphere, the interior mental practice of meditating on miniature scenes from Mary's life and mysteries surrounded by symbolical flowers in Books of Hours could now be moved out into the actual Mary Garden. In fact, flower symbols could now be found in the garden relating to all the mysteries of the rosary, which itself was originally considered an ideal garden of roses offered to Mary as the Aves and mysteries were prayed on the "enclosed garden" of the rosary beads. Whether or not there were other Mary Gardens prior to the Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady, the over thirty thousand letters received by us from throughout the United States and many other countries - elicited by over sixty articles and several hundred additional press mentions - have demonstrated that the tradition of the Flowers of Our Lady and Mary Garden has been renewed in religious culture; and that the Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady is the mother garden of the present day world-wide Mary Garden movement. Student of monastic spirituality, Thomas Morton, wrote us from Our Lady of Gethsemani Abbey, Kentucky in 1952: "We shall try to make good use of the seeds, in order that Mary may have many flowers to look upon, in her honor and in that of her Risen Son, Our Savior, when May comes. "They will receive purer prayers from us because of the incentive you have offered us. And may you benefit by all this in your turn. God bless you always." The Garden of Our Lady also appeared to be unique in that it was conceived as a garden with a religious message, for the world and, particularly, for the life sciences. The names and inscriptions of the Angelus bells, Mendel and Pasteur - displayed on a prominent bronze plaque imbedded in the stone structure of the Angelus tower - and the list and planting plan of the symbolical flowers of Our Lady make clear that the tower and garden are intended to bring a message to visitors and to the surrounding community. To this end, their location across the street from St. Joseph's Church provides a ready accessibility that gives visitors a sense of welcome and of freedom as they enter. The message of the Garden of Our Lady is that in the religious thought and devotion of other times and places, flowers were seen as religious symbols; and that these symbols, with their legends and poetry, still offer us riches of love, illumination and meditation today. The message is, further, that within the overall unity of the physical and spiritual, all material things may be seen as symbols or illuminations of religious truths - whether of the divine attributes, of revealed scripture, or of the stages by which we can come to know and grow in union with God to further the building of his earthly kingdom. Plants and flowers are mirrors reflecting whatever view of nature the visitor may bring to a garden. Thus, on encountering the symbolism of the Flowers of Our Lady at St. Joseph's, the visitor may respond to them in a number of ways. Responses might range from a flood of mystical insights from experiencing the luminosity of the flower symbols revealed by the religious names as shown on the plant markers; to an attempt to relegate the religious plant names to "interesting plant lore" of no present-day religious importance; to vigorous or even contemptuous objection to "superimposing" doctrinaire religious values on the natural goodness and beauty of flowers. Objections to religious flower symbolism often reveal a belief that the hope for peace and renewal on earth is to be found ultimately in the goodness of nature - that nature contains within itself the power of its own redemption and renewal. Accordingly, what is sought in visiting a garden or the countryside is enjoyment of its purity and beauty, and poetic and mystical communion with it, without the need or intrusion of formal symbolism of any redemptive source outside it, such as the symbolism of the Flowers of Our Lady. From this viewpoint, the effectiveness of the redemptive power of nature, including human nature, may be seen as awaiting a more intensive and enlightened pursuit of science and technology - including the life, psychological and social sciences, as well as the physical sciences. Or, it may be seen as awaiting the more faithful pastoral pursuit of natural human goodness, broader grass roots political action, natural foods and medicines, appropriate technology, environmental protection, ecological balance, solar energy, or some other goodness of nature. So long as this belief in the ultimate discoverability and effectuation of created goodness is held out as the primary hope of society, there is a rejection of any call to faith in supernatural truth, grace, illumination and power, as illusory or hypocritical. However, as the power of matter released by science becomes more and more destructive; as social injustices become more blatant with increased communications exposure; as the depletion of topsoil and mineral resources is accelerated; as environmental pollution worsens; and as initiative for social change becomes more desperate and terroristic, the basic faith in the redemptive sufficiency of the goodness of nature is increasingly called into question. As this occurs, the redemptive alternative, for our eternally springing hope, is to rise from the perceived goodness, beauty, purity, wisdom and power of nature to faith and acts of faith in the infinite supernatural goodness, beauty, purity, wisdom and power of God - seen as mirrored and reflected by nature - Who provides for the world as its Creator and Sustainer; who has redemptively overcome the world on the Cross; and Who makes available the means of renewal in the sending of his Holy Spirit. Once the truths of our redemption and renewal are perceived as mirrored in the forms of nature, then our vision is opened to see them mirrored still further in the imagery of the natural sciences. This would appear to be the message of the Garden of Our Lady to scientists, as strikingly anticipated (inspired?) by a passage from Auguste Nicolas' "La Vierge Marie Dans Le Plan Divin", 1869 (trans): "When the Word was born of Mary to put his seal on his work, when he remade the moral world, he created a new heaven and a new earth to the sight of humankind, a new heaven and a new earth which have their hope, their moral reason, in Christianity, the only true philosophy of nature, and of the history of the world. "Thus, when we take images from nature to explain the truths of faith, to explain Jesus Christ, we do not make such a far-fetched and indiscreet borrowing as one might suspect. On the contrary, we make nature serve its primary purpose, which is to manifest the perfections of God, while at the same time serving the needs of humanity, perfections produced for our eyes in Jesus Christ as their origin, to whom therefore the copy should correspond. "Further, we do not hesitate to say that the order of the natural sciences, including the processes of these sciences, profoundly reflects Jesus Christ and his mysteries. Indeed, it soars even higher than nature, pushes farther ahead in its secrets, and arrives, as though by the formulas of a transcendental and divine alphabet, at marvelous illuminations which associate it with the vision of angels, and anticipate some of the answers that are reserved for us by eternity. "We do not have to descend from these lofty considerations to apply them to the most Blessed Virgin. As the image most closely conformed to her divine Son, she is herself, through the grace of this correspondence, a moral type surpassing all creatures . . . The attributes of mercy, holiness, virginity, maternity, humility and all those which shine in this admirable type give her also a symbolical claim to nature which justifies and consecrates all the figures applied to her. . . . Mary thus receives from everything that is beneficial, fruitful, sweet and pure in the world a symbolical tribute of praise as the most Blessed Lady and Queen of the nature which was restored through her divine maternity. " When we consider St. Joseph's Bells as ringing out the message of the angel to Our Lady in her Garden in Woods Hole, the entire garden becomes a symbol proclaiming her excellences and privileges as the representative and epitome of all life on earth - who, through her fiat, opened up all natural life to the supernatural life of God. Whether her Immaculate Conception is perceived as a restoration of the original integrity and purity of creation, from a "creationist" viewpoint, or as a spiritual "selection" or "mutation," from an "evolutionist" viewpoint, Mary was "our tainted nature's solitary boast," whose utter purity, humility, openness, obedience, love and perpetual freedom from sin made possible her fullness of grace and overshadowing by the Holy spirit for the conception, bearing, nurturing and teaching of, and redemptive partnership with, the God-Man, Jesus Christ. From this viewpoint, Mary is seen as opening up the continuum between natural and supernatural life wherein all life is redeemed, renewed and drawn by God's love to fullness and culmination in angelic praise of and participation in the eternal life of the Trinity. "I will teach you of life and of life eternal." "Thanks be to God." But once the world of nature and science is seen to symbolize the divine truth, grace, wisdom, plan and power of redemption and renewal, there then arises the question of how we are to instrument these in our daily lives and work. Here again religious nature tradition points the way. By placing the Garden Of Our Lady on Church grounds, Mrs. Lillie, founder of the garden, tapped a still deeper tradition of the rural religious use of plants and flowers, namely their ritual blessing for reservation as religious objects in homes, barns and workshops, where they served as means for the flow of grace and as foci for providential protection and favor - similar to the blessing and use of crucifixes, medals, prayer beads, candles and holy water. Written formulas and rites have come down to us from the 9th century - no doubt reflecting earlier practices - which were used in church blessings of plants, flowers and grains on the feasts of the Branches (Palm Sunday), Pentecost, Corpus Christi, St. John's Eve, the Assumption, the Nativity of Mary and on other occasions. Blessings were also performed in gardens and fields by the clergy - or by the laity - employing holy water and plants especially blest in church for sprinkling it. First fruits blessings, in church or field, were perceived as extending to all plants of the garden, field, orchard or vineyard. It is the priestly blessing of the Woods Hole Garden of Our Lady - incorporating it in the sacramental channels of the Church - which imparts the sense of holiness to it, and makes it a source of grace, in augmentation of the Mass and Liturgical Hours, for the religious efficacy of the symbolical flowers in hearts and minds. The very symbolical forms, textures, colors, purity and beauty of flowers could be said to generate in us an illuminative attunement for reception of corresponding actual graces flowing from their blessing. In our conduct of the Mary's Gardens project through the years, we have felt drawn back again and again to St. Joseph's and the Garden of Our Lady as a font of actual graces for our work. These, then, are some of the riches offered by St. Joseph's Church Angelus Tower Garden of Our Lady, as attention is being called to it through its golden jubilee restoration for the St. Joseph's Parish centennial celebration. With a view to future generations, the builders dug down twenty-five feet to anchor the foundation of the Angelus tower in rock; and a stone sea wall was built to protect the plot of the tower and garden against erosion from high waters pouring in from the sea through the Eel Pond inlet. The garden beds were edged with cut stone, and the Hannell sculpture of Our Lady was designed with rounded surfaces to withstand the weather. Mrs. Lillie, who died in 1958 at the age of eighty-eight, bequeathed a trust fund to provide income for tower, sea wall, plot and garden maintenance through the years. Now, with the rekindling of the original vision of the Garden of Our Lady through the parish research, headed up by Jane A. McLaughlin, Parish Historian - and with the support of Fr. James P. Dalzell, the present Pastor of St. Joseph's - a Mary's Garden Society has been formed to carry forward the restoration. In addition to locating nursery sources for the plants on the plan, and arranging for their transportation and planting at the proper times, the committee members will give special care to the garden and will maintain a supply of plant lists and markers and also leaflets and article reprints about the garden so that its full message will be made known to visitors and will be sustained as a part of the life of the parish. To seal the reciprocity between the Garden of Our Lady and the Mary Garden Movement inspired by it, nursery sources for some of the more-difficult-to-find plants have been searched out by Mary's Gardens: and Madonna Lily bulbs from the renowned Mary Garden of Bonnie Roberson at the 1968 - 1982 international Mary Garden center in Hagerman, Idaho, were donated as the first restoration plants to be planted last fall. In this centennial/jubilee year may the bells of St. Joseph's Church Angelus tower proclaim the bursting forth of new transfiguring love from the beautiful Garden of Our Lady atop Woods Hole's heart shaped Eel Pond!