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  2. Giardino dell'Iris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giardino_dell'Iris

    The garden is owned by the Società italiana dell'Iris, who hosted the annual "International dell'Iris" in 1954. Then with help from the local town council, 2 acres of land was made available for the garden. Donations made by many foreign growers including the Presby Memorial Iris Gardens in New Jersey, helped fund the project. Specialists ...

  3. Swan Lake Iris Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swan_Lake_Iris_Gardens

    Swan Lake Iris Gardens is a public park located in Sumter, South Carolina. It is currently the only public park in the United States to have all eight species of swans —including Royal white mutes , Black Necks , Coscorobas , Whoopers , Black Australians , Whistlers, Bewicks , and Trumpeters .

  4. Presby Memorial Iris Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presby_Memorial_Iris_Gardens

    Presby Memorial Iris Gardens is a nonprofit, living museum specializing in iris flowers, located at 474 Upper Mountain Avenue, Montclair in Essex County, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The gardens are situated on 6.5 acres. Adjacent to the gardens is a Victorian house, the Walther House.

  5. Iris (plant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iris_(plant)

    Iris is extensively grown as ornamental plant in home and botanical gardens. Presby Memorial Iris Gardens in New Jersey, for example, is a living iris museum with over 10,000 plants, [24] while in Europe the most famous iris garden is arguably the Giardino dell'Iris in Florence (Italy) which every year hosts a well attended iris breeders ...

  6. Mary Helen Wingate Lloyd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Helen_Wingate_Lloyd

    Mary Helen Wingate Lloyd (1868–1934) was an American horticulturist who was a founding member of the American Iris Society and creator of a celebrated "iris bowl" garden. Wingate was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1868, one of four children of George Wood Wingate and Susan Prudence (Man) Wingate.

  7. American Iris Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Iris_Society

    The founding of the AIS was prompted by the growing popularity of irises as garden plants in America, spurred in part by an award-winning exhibit of iris cultivars at the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, in part by William Rickatson Dykes' landmark 1913 book The Genus Iris, and in part by a small flood of articles in popular magazines like Country Life.

  8. Grace Sturtevant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Sturtevant

    Grace was a founding member of the American Iris Society. [5] In early 1920, she wrote a brief article in The Flower Grower urging that "it is high time that some central body should gather together information on Iris matters whether it is the history of our garden favorites, the records of our present varieties or the opportunities for the ...

  9. Inniswood Metro Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inniswood_Metro_Gardens

    In 1960, sisters Grace and Mary Innis purchased a 38-acre slice of land that would become Inniswood Metro Gardens. [2] In 1961, they moved onto the property bringing with them mementos from their childhood home on Cleveland Avenue in Linden Heights. Grace had a fondness for horticulture and studied art and horticulture at The Ohio State University.