Drawing Together: The Longfellows' Cultural Legacy


Children's Gate, Longfellow Garden, Portland, ca. 1930

Children's Gate, Longfellow Garden, Portland, ca. 1930
Item 12034   info
Longfellow Garden Club

The Society’s library consumed most of what had been the family’s barn, garden, and orchard but the Longfellow Garden Club worked on a design to “preserve the garden atmosphere and plants” known to them.

Alexander designed an entrance to the garden. “The Children’s Gate” was named in honor of the five children who contributed funds for its construction.

In 1926, landscape architect Myron Lamb of the Harvard School of Landscape Gardening created drawings of all the garden beds.

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