One in a series about the unsung hero, the volunteer gardener.….…..
This past September my sister Mary Lynn took me to see the gardens at Cranbrook House, located near her home north of Detroit. Built in 1908-09, the estate was built by George Gough Booth and Ellen Scripps Booth (why do rich people always have 3 names?) in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Although it was late in the season for a Michigan garden, everything looked pretty great to a Socal gardener used to parched vistas. A lot to credit is no doubt due to the unsung heroes of public gardens everywhere, otherwise known as the Garden Auxiliary. In 1971, Henry Scripps Booth, a son of original owners George and Ellen Booth, organized an auxiliary to tend the gardens and improve the acreage around Cranbrook House. In 1974, a similar auxiliary was formed to assist in preserving, improving and extending the usefulness of Cranbrook House as a cultural center. In early 1977, the two bodies merged to create the Cranbrook House and Gardens Auxiliary, now more than 500 members strong, to support Cranbrook in caring for the well-being of the Booths’ historic manor and gardens. We reap the rewards of the work of these volunteer gardeners who step up to tend the beautiful public gardens not only in the US but all over the world.

Love the patterns!





WOW! I sure would love to have a garden like that. Maybe I need to convince some people to join my auxiliary
I LOVE those borders! That is what I strive for!
Thanks for sharing this, I would never have known it existed.
some of my favorite memories were working in those stunning gardens. The middle garden photo was a sunken garden with the middle being annuals in a different design every year. The herbaceous borders are gorgeous. There is a herbal knot garden, a japanese garden and a hill of daffodils that must be seen to be believed. I haven’t seen it for many years but it is in my mind’s eye always.