Marin Art and Garden Center
Marin Art and Garden Center | |
---|---|
Type | botanical garden |
Location | 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Ross, California |
Area | 11 acres |
Created | 1945 |
Website | https://maringarden.org/ |
The Marin Art and Garden Center is a botanical garden in Ross, California. The site is 11 acres and features gardens and historic buildings, including the Barn Theater, which is home to theater company Ross Valley Players. Admission to the gardens is free.
History[]
The land where the Marin Art and Garden Center sits was part of Rancho Punta de Quentin, a 10,000-acre Mexican land grant purchased by James Ross in 1859. The acres that make up the current Marin Art and Garden Center were eventually owned by the Jonathan Kittle family, who put the land up for sale in 1943.[1]
The Marin Art and Garden Center was founded in 1945 by women members of the Marin Conservation League.[2][3] This project was led by the League's president, Caroline Sealy Livermore, who organized fundraising to obtain the $25,000 needed to buy the property.[1][4]
The site was the location for the Marin County Fair from 1947 to 1970.[3]
Gardens and features[]
The Marin Art and Garden Center's master plan was designed by landscape architect Thomas Church.[5] It contains several different gardens, including those focused on roses, edible plants, plants used in basketry, and native plants.[6] There are three species of redwood on the site, including the dawn redwood.[3]
Buildings on the property include modernist buildings and the Octagon House, which was once a pump house and later the José Moya del Piño Library.[1] There are also an art studio by Gardner Dailey and the "Bottle House" by Ray Oleson, both built in the late 1940s.[5]
Pixie Park Playground, designed by Robert Royston, is located at the Center.[5]
Ross Valley Players[]
The Barn Theater is the headquarters of the Ross Valley Players. The barn was built in 1860 on the farm later owned by the Kittle family. During the Great Depression, the community in Ross began using the barn as a theater. The Ross Valley Players assisted in the effort to turn the land into a garden in 1945.[7]
References[]
- ^ a b c Saekel, Karola (May 13, 1998). "Marin's Woodsy Garden Center". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
- ^ Swanson, Charlie (August 10, 2020). "Marin Sanctuary Marks 75 Years of Arts and Gardens". Bohemian.
- ^ a b c Rodriguez, Adrian (July 17, 2020). "Marin Art and Garden Center celebrates 75th anniversary with focus on longevity". Marin Independent Journal.
- ^ "History watch: Preserving Marin's beauty". Marin Independent Journal. February 13, 2008 – via NewsBank.
- ^ a b c Weinstein, David (June 29, 2019). "Living History: Marin Art & Garden Center". marinmagazine.com. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Bremier, BJ (August 31, 2018). "Fuller, fresher gardens, new MAGC manager promises". Marin Independent Journal.
- ^ Rogers, Rob (December 28, 2007). "Historic Ross theater is still a barn at heart". Marin Independent Journal – via NewsBank.
Coordinates: 37°57′48″N 122°33′16″W / 37.96333°N 122.55444°W
- Gardens in California
- Botanical gardens in California
- Parks in Marin County, California
- Octagon houses in California
- Bottle houses
- United States garden stubs