THE
GARDEN GATE
10839 Beverly Blvd.
People Place and Meaning
(Back of Right Door)
Through
time these hills have witnessed people of various cultures,
all have left their impression upon its soil. The Gabrielano/Tongva
people were perhaps the earliest. They journeyed through
this site upon a footpath that extended from the Pacific
Ocean to the San Gabriel Mountains and beyond. Spanish and
Mexican travelers also utilized this ancient trail. It was
known as North Walk.
One
of Whittier’s earliest settlers recognized the potential
of this garden setting. Harriet Williams Russell Strong,
with her husband Charles, purchased 220 acres from Pio Pico,
California’s last Mexican Governor. The Strong Ranch,
known as Rancho Del Fuerte, thrived with the harvest of
citrus and fruit trees. These trees provided a vehicle by
which individuals were transported and transformed into
a community. North Walk eventually became Norwalk Boulevard.
Through time footprints became a path and the footpath became
a boulevard.
The
bas-relief images of the Garden Gate were researched through
the generosity of the Whittier Museum and the Whittier Historical
Society. The left door of this gateway represents Harriet
Williams Russell Strong (1844-1926) with her four daughters,
Harriet Russell, Mary Lyman Russell, Georgina Pierpont Russell
and Nelle de Luce Russell. The right door represents Florence
Maple Thornburgh (1887-1994). The Garden Gate celebrates
the accomplishments of the women of Whittier past, present
and future.
Women
of Whittier
(Back of Left Door)
Herstory
may be found pressed within the pages of history where contributions
extend to virtually every field of the arts and sciences.
Their impression on this earth is found through the seeds
they nourished, the lives they touched and the fabric of
the community in which they lived.
Herstories
are like fallen leaves that nourish and inform the ground
we walk upon.
Within
the garden, living things in their abundance and diversity
symbolize and inspire aspects of the human condition. The
garden reflects a space of experience, a space of opportunity
and a space of infinite possibilities.
The
Garden Gate signifies the garden within each individual,
and celebrates the collective spirit in the community of
Whittier today. From established roots they continue to
grow,
Reaching
skyward, beyond themselves, they speak to us of our past
and inspire our future.
Guy
A. Wilson
Sculptor
October 9 2004