














|
 |

 |

Chapel dedication ceremony
 |
 |
New Chapel at Cancer Home Provides Peace
By Erika Anderson, Staff Writer, Georgia Bulletin
Published November 6, 2003

Top: Susan Sperduto, then President of Club Estates GC, operating the tiller to prepare the beds for planting. Bottom: Club members preparing and planting the beds.
 |
 |
 |
ATLANTAThere is a quiet haven located at the corner of Pollard Boulevard and Little Street. Thanks to the dedicated service of the Club Estates Garden Club of Brookhaven, Our Lady of Perpetual Help Cancer Home now has an outdoor Meditation Chapel.
The simple, timber frame structure, which houses the home's enormous bronze and oak crucifix, was dedicated on October 28, 2003 by Archbishop John F. Donoghue.
The Club Estates Garden Club of Brookhaven has been supporting OLPH Home since 1946. The group has raised money for and installed many landscape projects designed to enhance the natural beauty of the home's grounds and to bring joy to the patients, their families and to the home's sisters and staff.
Funding for the project was done over three years, with the Club Estates group holding annual luncheons and auctions that brought $25,000 for the chapel project. The OLPH Auxiliary donated an additional $30,000.
Following the completion of this ambitious project, the Club Estates Garden Club of Brookhaven received first place in Georgia and at the National Garden Club convention in 2004 for "Gardening for the Disabled."

This hardworking group of volunteers prepared the garden for plants. Left to right: Ralph Newman, Leonard Wilensky, Jackie Newman, Ron Weber, Fran Weber, Harriet Campbell, Frankie Wilensky, Sandra Durand
 |
 |
 |
Augusta's Spade and Trowel Collaborates with Woodrow Wilson Historic House Museum
The Spade and Trowel Garden Club of Augusta was asked to participate in a gardening project at the Woodrow Wilson Historic House Museum. Because Historic Augusta, Inc. is currently in the process of restoring the grounds and gardens using plant material typical of the Civil War and Reconstruction Periods, S&T members volunteered to restore the garden in Zone 3. Two Community On My Mind grants from the GCG have matched other donations to fund the Project. Plantings are designed for various seasons. In the Fall, club members will plant antique roses, which were President Wilson's mother's favorite at the time his family lived in this home.
 |

Left to right: Helen Huddleston, President, Mary Julia Coons, Ellen Wolff and Mary Tomlinson
 |
 |
Plantation Manor Project by Killarney Queen
Killarney Queen Garden Club, Thomasville, established a new flower bed located at the front entrance to Plantation Manor Assisted Living, in addition to the many other areas they have maintained over the years at the Alzheimer facility.
|