The Making of Azalea Park

October 11, 2018

Originally publishedSeptember 8, 2014

One of the favorite locations in Summerville is Azalea Park, featuring both natural and man-made beauty.
The park’s centerpiece is 16 acres purchased and donated to the town in the 1920s by a civic group that became the Flowertown Garden Club.


When the Great Depression began in the 1929, Mayor Grange Cuthbert envisioned the park as an azalea-filled site that would draw visitors and support the local economy.


Cuthbert approached local nurseryman George Segelken, propagator of the “Pride of Summerville” and “Pride of Mobile” azaleas. Segelken agreed to donate azaleas to the new park with the understanding that if anyone wanted to purchase the plants he would dig them up.


In the succeeding decades, the park would have many major cleanups, such as after hurricanes and ice storms. Local resident Worth Waring remembers after one such storm, when Boy Scouts were enlisted to plant donated pine tree seedlings.
And, after Hurricane Hugo, 25 years ago, the cleanup was marked with the installation of a visual display near the Cuthbert Community Center.


During the last 15 years, the natural beauty of the downtown park has been complemented by the installation of several bronze sculptures, through Sculpture in the South.


Those sculptures, the azaleas and turtle-filled ponds mean there is always something to delight at Azalea Park.

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