This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
restoration in record time. When Historic Garden Week arrived in April 2000, Daphne posed gracefully in her spot beside the small pool, flanked by white azaleas and shaded by the large live oak Admiral Richard E. Byrd had planted so many decades earlier.


Almost since its beginning, the mansion has had a small greenhouse— sometimes two—in the backyard where the governor’s wife could grow flowers and potted plants to decorate the house. At any given moment, hundreds of clay pots lined its shelves and floors. For much of the twentieth century, friends of the governor’s family with a talent for floral arranging came regularly to keep fresh flowers in the public rooms. First Lady Eddy Dalton remembers volunteers arriving almost daily. State-employed gardeners used the greenhouse to grow seedlings for the flowerbeds, to force bulbs for indoor display, and to make hanging baskets. For many years, supplementary flowers came from the Women’s Correctional Center in Goochland, where inmates tended gardens as part of a rehabilitation program. The last greenhouse was


PHOTO BY MICHAELE WHITE, GOVERNOR’S OFFICE


The House & Home Magazine


15


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44  |  Page 45  |  Page 46  |  Page 47  |  Page 48  |  Page 49  |  Page 50  |  Page 51  |  Page 52  |  Page 53  |  Page 54  |  Page 55  |  Page 56  |  Page 57  |  Page 58  |  Page 59  |  Page 60  |  Page 61  |  Page 62  |  Page 63  |  Page 64  |  Page 65  |  Page 66  |  Page 67  |  Page 68  |  Page 69  |  Page 70  |  Page 71  |  Page 72  |  Page 73  |  Page 74  |  Page 75  |  Page 76  |  Page 77  |  Page 78  |  Page 79  |  Page 80  |  Page 81  |  Page 82  |  Page 83  |  Page 84  |  Page 85  |  Page 86  |  Page 87  |  Page 88  |  Page 89  |  Page 90  |  Page 91  |  Page 92  |  Page 93  |  Page 94  |  Page 95  |  Page 96  |  Page 97  |  Page 98  |  Page 99  |  Page 100