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Aunt Aggie's Unusual Garden
Published April 4, 2015 by Florida Memory
In the early 20th century, visitors to Lake City in Columbia County were often encouraged to visit the local gardens owned by an African-American woman known as "Aunt Aggie." The plants were nice enough: calycanthus, oleander, crepe myrtle, spirea, wild azaleas, and at least eight varieties of roses. But that's not what made the garden unique.
What made Aunt Aggie's garden such a popular place to visit were the thousands of creatively arranged animal bones that decorated the space. For years, Aggie Jones and her husband Jenkins collected the bones of various animals, allowed them to dry and bleach out in the sun, and then arranged them into trellises, gateways, arches, flower bed borders, and other structures. Skulls topped many of these unusual features.
Agnes Jones, also known as "Aunt Aggie," in her unusual bone-decorated garden in Lake City, ca. 1908
Aggie and Jenkins Jones had both been born into slavery. Aggie came to Florida in 1844 with her owner, Elijah Mattox, who built a plantation near present-day Rose Creek in Columbia County. After Aggie was emancipated following the end of the Civil War, she continued to work for the Mattox family until she moved to Lake City. She bought property from one of her employers, Louise Cathey, in Lake City in 1883. It was on this property that Aunt Aggie began constructing her gardens.
So why the bones? There's no clear answer, really. Bone meal is an excellent fertilizer; maybe this was part of Aggie's motivation. Maybe it was just a bit of creative flair. At any rate, the "bone garden" became a popular tourist spot for travelers passing through Lake City by railroad or automobile. A pamphlet describing the garden says it was also a popular "lovers' retreat." Visitors would sometimes write their names and addresses on the bones – perhaps one of Florida's most unusual guest books. Plants and fresh vegetables were almost always available for sale.
Time changes all things, and with Aunt Aggie's garden it was no different. Aggie Jones died in 1918, and her garden and home were subsequently demolished to make way for a school. All that remains now are a handful of postcards and photographs, plus a few recollections written down by various visitors to Aunt Aggie's mysterious creation.
Cite This Article
Chicago Manual of Style
(17th Edition)Florida Memory. "Aunt Aggie's Unusual Garden." Floridiana, 2015. https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/294526.
MLA
(9th Edition)Florida Memory. "Aunt Aggie's Unusual Garden." Floridiana, 2015, https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/294526. Accessed December 28, 2024.
APA
(7th Edition)Florida Memory. (2015, April 4). Aunt Aggie's Unusual Garden. Floridiana. Retrieved from https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/294526