The collection contains records of the Leesburg Garden Club and includes directories, histories, minutes, committee reports,
annual reports, scrapbooks, GCV information, information on the Leesburg Garden Club's participation in Garden Week in Virginia,
photographs, information on the club's part in the adoption of zoning and a sign ordinance in Loudoun County, membership lists
and information on the club's 501c3 status and other miscellaneous material.
Physical characteristics and conditions affect use of some of this material. Photocopying of fragile items not permitted.
Special handling of scrapbooks required.
Preferred Citation
Leesburg Garden Club Collection, 1920- (M 044), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Acquisition Information
Leesburg Garden Club, Loudoun County, VA.
Alternative Form Available
None
Accruals
2006.0200, 2010.0101, 2013.0041, 2014.0026
Processing Information
Teckla H. Cox, 7 July 2011; Updated 8 November 2013
The Leesburg Garden Club was founded 9 December 1915 by four women, Mrs. Page (Bessie H.M.) Laughlin (1876-1950), Mrs. John
(Frances P.) Gibson(1882-1964), Mrs. J.R.H. (Cora L.) Alexander (1884-1972), and Mrs. William (Norita F.) Martin (1876-1952).
Early in 1916 eight additional women were invited to join, and by the end of 1917 there was a total of 22 members. By 2010
membership was limited to 40 active members, 10 associate members (members who for reasons acceptable to the Executive Board
can no longer be active but who are entitled to the privileges of the club including voting), one non-resident member and
such honorary members as the club and the Executive Board vote to include. Honorary members are people who have benefitted
the club to a considerable extent. For example, the husband of a member was made an honorary member because of his work growing
and hybridizing lilies which the club entered in many shows and with which it won many ribbons.
The club began as a group who met to read aloud from the works of Charles Dickens (1812-1870). One member mentioned hearing
of something called a "garden club" and so Dickens was abandoned in favor of plants. Although named the Leesburg Garden Club,
members came from all sections of Loudoun County and in the beginning many of them lived on farms as well as in the Town of
Leesburg. Almost all had vegetable gardens, so there was initially as much emphasis on vegetables as on flowers.
On 18 May, 1926 the Leesburg Garden Club became the 14th member of the Garden Club of Virginia (GCV) which had been founded
in 1920 with the object of encouraging preservation, conservation, beautification, and restoration in the state. The GCV
organized Garden Week in Virginia to earn money for this purpose and in 1929 the Leesburg Garden Club opened two historic
houses and made "about $16." Proceeds have increased tremendously and by 2010 the club's gross receipts surpassed $10,000
for Garden Week, which takes place at the end of April each year.
From the beginning the club had a number of civic projects as well as the members' own interests in gardening. Starting in
1917 members supplied fresh vegetables to the local hospital from their own gardens and from a garden which they established
on the hospital grounds. They canned produce to provide vegetables for the staff and patients in winter in the days before
freezers. This program continued until the early 1940s when the club switched its attention to landscaping at the hospital.
Members also planted flowers to cheer up patients. Another early project was to help elementary school children plant flowers
and teach them about beautification. This project expanded to become the Highway Development Committee and eventually the
Beautification Committee which promotes the aesthetic improvement of Loudoun County and its towns and highways.
The club's concern with county beautification led it to work actively in opposition to the use of billboards. One member,
Vinton Liddell Pickens (1900-1993), particularly urged the use of zoning to prevent the construction of billboards. She regularly
attended meetings of the Board of Supervisors until the board agreed to appoint a Planning Commission to write a zoning ordinance.
Vinton Pickens was the commission's first and longest serving chairman. Through the work of the Leesburg Garden Club, in
1942 Loudoun County became the first rural county in the country to have a zoning ordinance.
In 1985 the club became embroiled in a conflict with Lyndon LaRouche (1922 - ), an extremist political figure. LaRouche moved
his headquarters to Loudoun County, and one of his organizations, Campaign Publications, Inc., filed for a variance to change
the use of its agriculturally zoned property. The Leesburg Garden Club joined other concerned groups and citizens to protest
the request. The Board of Zoning Appeals denied the request in February of 1986, and LaRouche and his supporters targeted
those who opposed the variance with media attacks. Leesburg Garden Club members were described by LaRouche in an interview
as "these clacking busybodies in this Soviet jellyfish front sitting here in Leesburg oozing out their funny little propaganda
making nuisances of themselves."
The Leesburg Garden Club became a non-profit 501c3 organization in 1999 and has continued its civic work in order to maintain
that status. The club has worked with Oatlands Plantation and Dodona Manor in preserving and maintaining these historic properties,
which are open to the public. Each year it sends a child to Nature Camp where he or she learns the value and interest of
nature conservation. A college scholarship is awarded each year to a high school student who will be studying in a horticulture
related field. A long established custom has been for the members to meet in December to create wreaths and decorative greens
to hang on Leesburg's unique swinging courthouse yard gates and the doors of Thomas Balch Library, the town's history and
genealogy library. Other projects undertaken in the past have included encouraging homeowners to beautify their yards by
giving them daffodil bulbs, planting dogwood trees in public spaces, and persuading the town of Leesburg to place hanging
baskets of flowers on utility poles. The club monitors the county's sign ordinance and works with the county when amendments
are necessary; this has happened only twice in the 70 years since it was adopted as part of the zoning ordinance.
The club also is active in gardening activities such as horticulture, flower arranging and flower shows. It takes part in
the major GCV shows as well as sponsoring them when its turn comes in the GCV rotation. Members have won statewide awards
for their work in conservation, preservation and beautification including, the GCV Massie Medal four times for saving the
Broad Run bridge, introducing zoning to the county, for horticultural achievement and for donating trees for the Douglass
Community Center "Park for all Ages." The club won the GCV Common Wealth Award for that park, and a member won the GCV deLacy
Grey Memorial Medal for her work to protect the natural resources of the commonwealth. 10 members have won the GCV Horticultural
Award of Merit.
The collection contains records of the Leesburg Garden Club and includes directories, histories, minutes, committee reports,
annual reports, scrapbooks, GCV information, information on the Leesburg Garden Club's participation in Garden Week in Virginia,
photographs, information on the club's part in the adoption of zoning and a sign ordinance in Loudoun County, membership lists
and information on the club's 501c3 status and other miscellaneous material.
Early records of the club were lost when the historian died. Consequently, most of the material begins with the1940s although
there are a few earlier items including histories and some meeting/yearbooks. Minutes from 1995 and 2007 are also missing.
This is an open collection and additional material will be added at least every two years.
The collection includes seven scrapbooks dating from 1948 through part of 2008. The material which would have been placed
in a scrapbook during and after 2008 is currently being put into folders for better preservation. Much of the material, especially
in the early books, is in very fragile condition. Material which had come loose from pages has been placed in containers with
interleaved notations of where those missing pages may be found. Some Garden Week material and yearbooks may also be found
in the scrapbooks.
Files on Historic Garden Week note many addresses and locations of houses which may be compared with the Lewis/Edwards Architectural
Surveys of Loudoun County, 1971-1983 (M 022), Architectural Surveys of Leesburg, 1971-2001(M 016), and Loudoun County Architectural
Surveys, Supplement, 2003 (M 011) for more information on many of the buildings.
Lewis/Edwards Architectural Surveys of Loudoun County, Virginia, 1971-1983 (M O22); Loudoun County Architectural Surveys Supplement,
2003 (M 011); Leesburg Architectural Surveys, 1971-2001 (M 016), Lyndon LaRouche Collection, 1979-1986 (SC0075), Follow the
Green Arrow: The History of the Garden Club of Virginia, 1920-1970, Mrs. James Bland Martin, V REF 635.9 MAR
Folder 18: Garden Week publicity, Woodburn, Oatlands, Little Oatlands, Oatlands Hamlet, Oak Hill, Metzger House (in Leesburg), Chatel
House (in Leesburg), Morven Park,
1971
Folder 19: "Historic Garden Week in Virginia" book,
1973
Folder 22: Garden Week publicity, Limestone Quarter, Morven Park, Eckles Estate, Hedgeland, Oak Hill, Oatlands, Fletcher garden (in Leesburg),
Mills House (in Leesburg),
1973
Folder 23: Garden Week ticket,
1973
Folder 24: Garden Week, Highway Department-signs,
Folder 25: Garden Week, invitations and bus tours,
1973
Folder 1: Garden Week 1975, publicity (1 of 4): Little Oatlands, Oatlands Hamlet, Oak Hill , Harrison-Trone House (later called Glenfiddich,
originally Harrison Hall) in Leesburg, Sage Hill, Cox House in Leesburg,
1975
Folder 2: Garden Week, publicity (2 of 4): Dietz house at 11 Cornwall St. N.W.,
1975
Folder 3: Garden Week, publicity (3 of 4),
1975
Folder 4: Garden Week, publicity (4 of 4),
1975
Folder 5: Garden Week, descriptions of houses,
1975
Folder 6: Garden Week, brochure, copy for printer,
1975
Folder 7: "Historic Garden Week in Virginia" book,
1975
Folder 8: Garden Week, summary,
1975
Folder 9: "Historic Garden Week in Virginia," book,
1977
Folder 12: Garden Week, publicity, printed articles with photographs,
1977
Folder 13: Garden Week, publicity, house descriptions: Little Spring, Oak Hill, Oatlands Hamlet, Little Oatlands, Braddock and Trowbridge
houses (both in Leesburg),
1977
Folder 14: Garden Week (Middleburg area, sponsored by Fauquier-Loudoun Garden Club with help from Leesburg Garden Club), brochure,
1978
Folder 15: "Historic Garden Week in Virginia," booklet,
1979
Folder 16: Garden Week, brochure: Braddock House (In Leesburg), 19 (old street number) West (now northwest) Loudoun St. in Leesburg,
11 West (now northwest) Cornwall St. in Leesburg, Belgrove, Burr Ridge, Oatlands Hamlet, Little Oatlands, Oak Hill,
1979
Folder 17: Garden Week, publicity and house descriptions,
1979
Folder 18: "Historic Garden Week in Virginia" booklet,
1980
Folder 19: "Historic Garden Week in Virginia" booklet,
1981
Folder 20: Garden Week, ticket, brochures (3 copies): (addresses are old street numbers) Shea house 49 (old street number) West (now
northwest) Cornwall St., Conrad house 20 West (now northwest) North St., Rokeby, Oatlands Hamlet, Little Oatlands, Church
of our Saviour, Oatlands miller's house, Oat Hill,
1981
Folder 21: Garden Week, publicity and house descriptions,
1981
Folder 22: Garden Week, Little Oatlands-photograph,
1981
Folder 4: Garden Week, brochure and ticket (Oak Hill, Little Oatlands, Oatlands Hamlet, Cox House (10 Cornwall St. N.E.), Rock Spring
Farm, McElhinney House (Ayr St. S.W.), Norris House (Loudoun St. S.W.), Westmoreland Davis Equestrian Institute),
1987
Folder 5: Garden Week, advertising and business,
1987
Folder 6: Garden Week, buses and parking,
1987
Folder 7: Garden Week, committees,
1987
Folder 8: Garden Week, houses, staffing, and instructions,
1987
Folder 9: Garden Week, letters about complimentary tickets,
1987
Folder 10: Garden Week, publicity (1 of 2),
1987
Folder 11: Garden Week, publicity (2 of 2),
1987
Folder 12: Garden Week, brochures (4 copies) and advertising,
1989