Old-Growth Azaleas Survive the Tramples of Time

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In 1828, the explorer Jedediah Smith first documented an extraordinary stand of native azaleas flourishing along the Chetco River in present-day Brookings, Ore.
During the 1850s, this fragrant grove sat in the path of a hectic pack-trail and was pummeled by miners.  Decades later, it took a further thrashing from the coastal wagon route and was overgrown by an invasion of non-native blackberry vines.  In the early 1930s, it provided pasture for mules with an appetite for flowering plants.
Somehow, some of the azalea shrubs survived.
The presence of this botanical wonder did not go unappreciated, so some alert local citizens requested to have it designated as a park.  In 1937, the State purchased the property from the Brookings Land & Townsite Company for $2,466.  The park’s upkeep proved costly, and after a long period of neglect, the State turned maintenance over to the City of Brookings.  In 1994, volunteers formed the Azalea Park Foundation.
Today, the 37-acre, manicured site is the so-called “Crown Jewel” of Brookings, boasting five wild species of old-growth azaleas alongside thousands of additional ornamental plantings.
 
Sources: Adams, Mike. Chetco. Brookings, Oregon, The Chetco Valley Historical Society, 2011;
"Facilities - Azalea Park." City of Brookings, Oregon, City Hall, www.brookings.or.us/facilities/facility/details/Azalea-Park-5.  Accessed 21 Oct. 2017;  "Azalea Park Foundation." Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/azaleaparkfoundation/. Accessed 21 Oct. 2017; "Azalea Park." City of Brookings, Oregon, City Hall, www.brookings.or.us/ArchiveCenter/ViewFile/Item/239. Accessed 21 Oct. 2017.

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3313
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Laurel Gerkman