Arboretum
Plant Collections
General
Info | Native Plants | Wild
Flower Garden
Caroline Black Garden | Connecticut College
Campus | Greenhouse
The Caroline Black Garden is distinctive among the
Arboretum plant collections. It includes native and exotic species
as well as some very unusual cultivars. It currently contains
187 different woody taxa,which makes visiting the garden a rewarding
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experience throughout the year. In autumn,
the entry beds are striking with their ornamental grasses and
late blooming plants. Many mature evergreen specimens make it
lovely in winter, and the garden is literally ablaze with flowers
in spring. Summer blooming plants include colorful Azaleas and
the Sourwood (Oxydendrum arborea) tree |
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Summer 1997 |
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Click here to view a checklist
of the woody
species in The Caroline Black Garden as
well as a map of their locations.
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Irises in the Caroline Black Garden, c. 1940 |
The garden was established in the mid 1920's by Dr. Caroline
Black, first chairperson of the Connecticut College Botany Department,
as a teaching facility for botany students. Following Dr. Black's
untimely death in 1930, the College named the garden in her honor.
Many of the mature specimens we appreciate today are a result
of donations
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Students enjoy a late summer day, 1953 |
made in Dr. Black's memory. The garden began in the northern
portion of its present location, and featured many perennial
plants, especially Iris. Due to the increasing size of many of
the trees and shrubs most perennials were phased out by the 1960's.
The Caroline Black Garden is designed with four distinct "rooms".This
creates the effect of a number of smaller gardens within the
whole. At right, is the small stream surrounded by Azaleas in
the eastern portion of the garden. The southern border is lined
with some unusual conifers including mature specimens of C.
lawsoniana 'Triomf Van Boskoop' and C. pisifera 'Squarossa'
and others. The central portion of the garden includes a
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A room with a view, 1983 |
large Copper Beech (Fagus sylvatica 'Atropurpurea'),
Carolina Silverbell (Halesia tetraptera) and Japanese
Flowering Cherry (Prunus serrulata) The northern portion
includes a Hiba False Arborvitae (Thujopsis dolobrata), Korean
Azalea (Rhododendron mucronulatum), and Threadleaved Sawara
Falsecypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera 'Filifera').
On May 4, 2001, The Caroline Black
Garden was dedicated as a member garden in the international
organization, Gardens
for Peace. This not-for-profit organization seeks to promote
and achieve peace in the world "through the universal language
of gardens.
- Please Click on this Map to view some
- of the more interesting specimens.
How to Visit the Gardens
The Caroline Black Garden is located directly across
from the College main entrance on Route 32 . Parking is available
behind Vinal Cottage which is currently home to the Career Services
Department.
From Route 32, turn into the athletic center entrance;
turn right onto Winchester road, and then turn right into the
first driveway.
Visitors can pick up a free informational brochure
with map at the Arboretum Office, Room 103 in the F.W. Olin Science
Center on the Connecticut College Campus.
Or, Call (860) 439-5020
Directions to the Arboretum office.
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