Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Expanding our Educational Outreach | Page 20

People and Happenings Wildflower Meadow A habitat vital for many native and visiting wildlife has been created beneath one of Mount Auburn’s oldest land- marks, Washington Tower. A wildflower meadow—funded in large part by a grant from the Anthony J. and Mildred D. Ruggiero Memorial Trust of Tucson, AZ—is nearly com- plete. Almost 10,000 plants—grasses, herbaceous perennials and shrubs—were installed this summer and in September the turf paths and a central viewing area were laid down. More plants need to be added next year, and the Friends is still seeking support for that work and for the three years of professional maintenance critical to project’s long-term success. The Wildflower Meadow will be an important new habitat at Mount Auburn. It is also a plant community that is becoming scarce in Massachusetts due to development, fragmentation of farmland, pollution, and competition from invasive plants. The Mount Auburn meadow will benefit many species of grassland birds, butterflies, insects and small mammals and will also contain a seep, a small water feature that is attractive to these animals. (Top left) The new Wildflower Meadow below Washington Tower (September 2007). (Top right) Mulching the meadow just after its installation (August 2007). (Above) One of the turf paths (September 2007). Photos by Jennifer Johnston Media Coverage Bill on the Road Again The June 17 Boston Sunday Globe featured an extensive article, “The history of ether, from six feet under,” about anesthesia residents from Massachusetts General Hospital coming to Mount Auburn to visit the graves of some of the notable physicians and founders of their profession buried here. The article included photographs of the group at the Cemetery and images of the monuments of Oliver Wendell Holmes, William T.G. Morton, Charles T. Jackson, Henry Jacob Bigelow and Charles Bulfinch. Mount Au- burn’s Historical Resources Preservation Award from the Watertown Historical Commission was mentioned in the Watertown Tab on June 19. President Bill Clendaniel traveled this past summer and fall to points near and far to speak about Mount Auburn and meet with peers in the cemetery, preservation, and horti- culture worlds. On June 4 he attended the annual meeting of Preservation Massachusetts, held at historic Fenway Park, and on June 21 represented Mount Auburn at the annual medals dinner of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society at Elm Bank in Wellesley, MA. From June 22 through 30 he visited several botanical gardens, in most cases with their directors—Duke Farms, Hillsborough, NJ; Chanticleer, PA; Mt. Cuba Center, DE; Longwood, PA; River Farm, Alexandria, VA (American Horticultural Society); Mount Vernon, VA; the National Arboretum and United States Botanic Garden in Washington, D.C.; and Brookside Gar- dens, Wheaton, MD. He also attended the annual American Public Gardens Association (APGA) conference in Wash- ington, D.C., on June 30, along with with Vice President of Operations & Horticulture (and retiring APGA President) David Barnett and Horticultural Curator Dennis Collins. The autumn issue of Sanctuary, the members’ magazines of the Massachusetts Audubon Society, mentioned the Cemetery in an article, “The Courthouse Cooper’s,” by Karl Meyer. He wrote: “In early May (Mass. Audubon Field Ornithologist Simon) Perkins took a group out to Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, where birders watched a pair of Cooper’s hawks chasing a red-tail. The chase strongly suggested that the Coops may have set up nesting somewhere within city limits.” 18 | Sweet Auburn Bill spoke on October 16 to the Garden Club of Concord, MA, on “Mount Auburn Cemetery at 175 Years.”