
from a visit a couple of years ago. loved.
Eudora Welty’s garden — really, that established so well by her mother, Chestina — was one she enjoyed tremendously, though not always keeping it up as thoroughly as her mother had. Chestina had put in a camellia “room” and planned a succession of bloom over the year.
Eudora’s night-blooming cereus was the topic of conversation (and twilight parties with notices in the paper), and even today there’s a cereus on the porch.
There’s an annual plant sale too. Here’s the link.

from a 2020 visit, though I didn’t get to tour the home
Flannery O’Connor’s home in Milledgeville, Georgia was where she lived from 1951-1964 and is on the National Register. Called “Andalusia”. We’re not really thinking about a garden so much as the grounds — the peacocks are still there, and the home is open as a museum.
My favorite Flannery quote ever, ever: “when in Rome, do as you done in Milledgeville.”
Then there’s Caroline Dormon, who as Country Roads put it:
A Louisiana legend, Dormon’s interests and expertise spanned forestry, botany, horticulture, conservation, ornithology, archaeology, ethnology, literature, art, education, and preservation, all fueled by an unassuming yet steadfast passion for all things wild. Born in 1888 at her family’s summer estate near Saline, Louisiana—called “Briarwood”—Dormon came of age at a time when women were largely absent from the fields in which she would thrive. She was a Renaissance woman, an intellectual ahead of her time who kept up a relentless pace to safeguard her corner of the world and all its natural beauty.
Briarwood is 212 acres, including the Bay Garden, the world’s most historic collection of Louisiana irises. It’s open to the public every weekend in March, April, May, October, and November.

from a 2024 visit
Of course I have to mention Rowan Oak, William Faulkner’s home in Oxford. People aren’t coming here for the garden necessarily, but there’s definitely something to the grounds. Eastern red cedar trees line the walkway from the road to the house, and these are significant because they were planted after yellow fever swept through the South. Those trees were thought to purify the air.
Faulkner did draw up and put in a maze garden with English tea roses and privet, plus there’s 29 acres of forest with a trail that goes from Rowan Oak to Ole Miss.
The museum keeps things especially old-school, with admission at $5 cash only.
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