Current:Home > NewsHow a secret Delaware garden suddenly reemerged during the pandemic -ProsperityEdge
How a secret Delaware garden suddenly reemerged during the pandemic
View
Date:2025-04-14 18:47:56
Wilmington, Delaware — If you like a reclamation project, you'll love what Paul Orpello is overseeing at the Hagley Museum and Library in Wilmington, Delaware.
It's the site of the original DuPont factory, where a great American fortune was made in gunpowder in the 19th century.
"There's no other post-industrial site reimagined in this way," Orpello, the museum's director of gardens and horticulture, told CBS News.
"There's only one in the world," he adds.
It's also where a DuPont heiress, Louise Crowninshield, created a garden in the 1920s.
"It looked like you were walking through an Italian villa with English-style plantings adorning it," Orpello said of the garden.
Crowninshield died in 1958, and the garden disappeared over the ensuing decades.
"Everything that she worked to preserve, this somehow got lost to time," Orpello said.
In 2018, Orpello was hired to reclaim the Crowninshield Garden, but the COVID-19 pandemic hit before he could really get going on the project. However, that's when he found out he didn't exactly need to, because as the world shut down in the spring of 2020, azaleas, tulips and peonies dormant for more than a half-century suddenly started to bloom.
"So much emotion at certain points," Orpello said of the discovery. "Just falling down on my knees and trying to understand."
"I don't know that I could or that I still can't (make sense of it)," he explained. "Just that it's magic."
Orpello wants to fully restore the garden to how Crowninshield had it, with pools she set in the factory-building footprints and a terrace with a mosaic of a Pegasus recently discovered under the dirt.
"There was about a foot of compost from everything growing and dying," Orpello said. "And then that was gently broomed off. A couple of rains later, Pegasus showed up."
Orpello estimates it will cost about $30 million to finish the restoration, but he says he is not focused on the money but on the message.
"It's such a great story of resiliency," Orpello said. "And this whole entire hillside erupted back into life when the world had shut down."
- In:
- COVID-19 Pandemic
- Delaware
Jim Axelrod is the chief investigative correspondent and senior national correspondent for CBS News, reporting for "CBS This Morning," "CBS Evening News," "CBS Sunday Morning" and other CBS News broadcasts.
TwitterveryGood! (98)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Coast Guard ends search for 3 missing Georgia boaters after scouring 94,000 square miles
- Maine shooting press conference: Watch officials share updates on search for Robert Card
- New York City sets up office to give migrants one-way tickets out of town
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- Rangers' Marcus Semien enjoys historic day at the plate in Simulated World Series
- Inmate suspected in prison attack on Kristin Smart’s killer previously murdered ‘I-5 Strangler’
- Q&A: This scientist developed a soap that could help fight skin cancer. He's 14.
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Tokyo’s Shibuya district raises alarm against unruly Halloween, even caging landmark statue
Ranking
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- 'Teen Mom 2' star Kailyn Lowry is pregnant with twins, she reveals
- Golden Bachelor’s Ellen Goltzer Shares Whether She Has Regrets With Gerry Turner
- Pete Davidson, John Mulaney postpone comedy shows in Maine after mass killing: 'Devastated'
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Public school teacher appointed as new GOP House of Delegates member
- Leo Brooks, a Miami native with country roots, returns to South Florida for new music festival
- 5 things to know about a stunning week for the economy
Recommendation
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Ex-Michigan star says someone 'probably' out to get Wolverines in sign-stealing scandal
You need to know these four Rangers for the 2023 World Series
Hundreds of mourners lay flowers at late Premier’s Li Keqiang’s childhood residence in eastern China
Travis Hunter, the 2
Jewish and Muslim chaplains navigate US campus tensions and help students roiled by Israel-Hamas war
Deion Sanders talks 'noodling' ahead of Colorado's game vs. UCLA at the Rose Bowl
Jewish and Muslim chaplains navigate US campus tensions and help students roiled by Israel-Hamas war