D&R Greenway News

Visit D&R Greenway’s Discovery Center at Point Breeze to learn about 27 heritage crops grown on this land by the Lenape over thousands of years

Visit D&R Greenway’s Discovery Center at Point Breeze to learn about 27 heritage crops
grown on this land by the Lenape over thousands of years, and by Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte
from 1820-1839. The exiled King of Spain and Napoleon’s older brother entertained the scientific,
political and artistic communities with food from his garden;
today’s produce is donated to feed people in need.

Take a journey through time on a tour of the new
Discovery Center at Point Breeze
Never-before-seen exhibits and artwork that
truly encompasses the beauty of Point Breeze.

 

HOURS

The Discovery Center and Historic Garden are open for tours
Saturdays and Sundays, 12 noon til 4:00 p.m.

DIRECTIONS: GPS to Divine Word Missionaries, 101 Park Avenue, Bordentown

 

Admission is at no cost. Donations are gladly accepted, with a suggested donation of $10
to support conservation of this historic and ecologically sensitive property.

Click HERE to learn more about art and artifacts at
The Discovery Center at Point Breeze,
from the Ramapough, one of the tribes of the Lenape who live in New Jersey
and the surrounding areas, and their Wolf, Turkey and Turtle clan

Thank you for supporting D&R Greenway, we hope to see you at The Discovery Center one day soon!

 

The Discovery Center at Point Breeze with a new welcoming sign and flags commemorating the Lenape Nation and Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte

“The two years it took to renovate the 200-year-old house, that was lived in by nuns and priests for the past 80 years, was a flash compared to the property’s thirteen thousand years of history,” says Mead. “It was a flash that has now put the Bordentown community on the world stage, with a welcoming place full of stories and discoveries that will delight history lovers, nature buffs, and artists alike.”

Preservation of the former estate of Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte, exiled King of Spain and older brother of Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte of France, by the State of NJ, City of Bordentown and D&R Greenway in 2020, was heralded in the New York Times, the Times of London and the Spanish News Service. Following two years of renovations by D&R Greenway, the land trust is opening the former Gardener’s House, the only remaining structure from the Bonaparte era. Guests will be treated to stories of the Crown Jewels, archaeological displays and a ca. 1819 painting of Joseph Bonaparte in its original frame that has never before been seen in public. Local artists showcase unique features of the land while inviting visitors to discover these special places for themselves. Even the restrooms, named the Delaware River and the Crosswicks Creek Water Closets, share facts and stories about the waterways and history connected to Point Breeze.

Peter Dawson, Chair, Board of Trustees of D&R Greenway, says, “We are excited to offer this opportunity to discover a new place that is important in history and as a unique natural area, while recognizing people whose stewardship of land has protected this place and others for generation upon generation.”

Many centuries before Bonaparte lived at Point Breeze, the land was occupied by the Lenape. Chief Red Feather, an 88-year-old wisdom keeper from southern New Jersey, will be at the Grand Opening with unique Native American crafts made from stone, wood and leather, offered for purchase. Recognition of the Lenape as the Original People of the Lenapekoking (land of the Lenape) is commemorated with a newly designed flag that recognizes the three Lenape clans: the turkey, the wolf and the turtle. The native peoples are known for their spiritual connection with the natural world that is recognized in the new Discovery Center.

Members of the public are invited to tour of the new Discovery Center and Historic Garden, view art and never-before-seen exhibits and a Delaware River sturgeon sculpture by artist Kate Graves.

 

The Original People Flag, designed by Eric Labacz, will welcome visitors to the Discovery Center at Point Breeze

All are welcome to discovery!

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Local Farm Hands Give Bonaparte Garden the Royal Treatment

“It’s been a tough year to start a garden,” D&R Greenway Garden Steward Lara Periard readily admits.

As gardeners and farmers throughout the U.S. 1 region are keenly aware, it was a spring of cold, unrelenting rain and a summer of searing, dry heat. But thanks to the effort of historians, architects, and dozens of volunteers, the Bonaparte Garden at Point Breeze in Bordentown is thriving and will host an opening celebration on Saturday, October 1, at 2 p.m.

Lara Periard is filling the garden at Bordentown’s Point Breeze estate with the types of vegetables that were grown in Joseph Bonaparte’s era.

The garden produces vegetables grown at the time when Napoleon’s older brother Joseph, former king of Naples and Spain, was known as King Joseph of Point Breeze. After his brother’s Waterloo defeat, Joseph made his way to America and in 1816 he bought and eventually created an estate in Bordentown. It is said to have been the center of society — both political and social — throughout the East Coast.

It was this history and magnificent setting that led to the property being listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. And then, it more or less sat there.

Enter the D&R Greenway. Working with the City of Bordentown and partnering with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, the remaining 60 acres of the estate were acquired in late 2020. That, alas, was at the height of the COVID years.

Linda Mead, the Greenway’s president and CEO, has explained that the long-range plan for the acquisition envisions constructing a Discovery Center in which historic photos and maps will illustrate how the landscape and garden were developed throughout history. COVID ensured that this goal had to be delayed because there was little person-to-person contact work that could be done.

With the pandemic settling in, it was decided that creating the garden was the best way to move forward. As an outdoor project, it is less susceptible to the spread of viruses among participants. Throughout 2021, there was much planning activity. Val Sassaman, a member of the Bordentown Historical Society, got to work and put together a list of crops grown at Bonaparte’s estate. Bill Flemer, retired D&R site manager, volunteered to till the land for the 90-foot-by-40-foot garden.

Recognizing that throughout history, fences have been an integral part of outdoor plantings as deer, rabbits, squirrels, and other predators ravaged plantings, David Seiler, D&R’s Land and Property Steward, made a significant contribution. Using his background in historic renovations, he designed a historically accurate wooden fence and then volunteered to build it.

By early 2022, with preliminary planning accomplished, a garden steward needed to be found. This would be a person not only to research and design the plantings but also to physically work — doing a lot of weeding while getting sweaty and bug-bitten and setting up watering schedules.

Lara Periard is excited to be that steward, signing on last April. A Virginia Tech graduate with a degree in science and technology in society, she had worked at Pennington’s Chickadee Creek organic farm for the past five years managing field crops and irrigation.

“My family liked to spend time hiking, camping, or fishing,” she says about growing up in Northern Virginia, “so I grew up enjoying being outdoors, and that love has carried on my whole life.”

The Hunterdon County resident adds, “I find farming to be very rewarding. You really get to see a plant’s life cycle from start to finish, and you can see the direct results of your labor in how abundant the harvest is … or not. If the latter, there’s an excitement in the challenge of what went wrong.”

Lara Periard and an army of volunteers grow vegetables from Napoleon’s time at Point Breeze, the former estate of his brother, Joseph Bonaparte.

Periard is quick to give credit. “Once the rain finally stopped, Bill Flemer towed a tractor all the way from Hopewell to till the ground. With that done, D&R land steward Rich Allen joined Seiler in building the fence. They worked at the height of summer’s heat wave,” she notes, “and it was not an easy job to be out there in the 90-degree weather.”

Sassaman alerted her to McMahon’s American Garden Calendar, published in Philadelphia in 1830. “Luckily,” Periard explains, “McMahon kept detailed records of popular varieties. Using that list, I scoured heirloom seed websites to find vegetables such as scarlet runner beans that are still around today.”

“Our most successful crops,” she reports, “have been the beans and the summer squashes. Two beet varieties that are still offered by organic farms today did well: Chioggia, a candy cane-colored beet and Golden, not surprisingly, a yellow beet.”

As with every garden, it was not all successes. “We lost the fennel to the brutal heat wave. Some particularly hungry armyworm caterpillars destroyed the kale and cabbage crops.”

Periard emphasizes the importance of volunteers and how wonderful they have been in making the garden a reality. She cites Becca Flemer, Bernie Miller, Destyne White, Ericka Taylor, Judy Craig, Kevin Borah, Mona Watnick, and Val and Dean Sassaman. “Their help was and is invaluable in getting the garden started and keeping it flourishing into fall.”

While the produce in Bonaparte’s garden was used to feed wealthy elite, today it nourishes those who are hungry and in need. The vegetable harvests are donated to Bordentown’s Christ Church. There, under the supervision of Reverend Matthew Tucker, known to all as Father Matt, and his wife Huynh, the food is distributed to local people.

Periard is already doing research for next year’s crops. “Because of our late start in getting the garden up and running, we were only able to grow fall crops. Next year the planted area will increase and artichokes, asparagus, cucumbers, eggplants, onions, and peas will be planted.”

“Should any wonder at the absence of tomatoes,” she explains, “these vegetables were considered poisonous during Bonaparte’s time and did not become part of American cuisine until shortly before the Civil War.”

“It is my hope,” Periard says, “that in connecting to the history of this place, from the Lenni-Lenape people who were here first, to Bonaparte’s time, to the present, people will feel a relationship not only to this area but also to its ecosystem. And thus be inspired to become — or continue to be — active in supporting conservation and restoration efforts.”

“This project,” she concludes, “is unique.”


Click here to listen to Lara Periard, Manager, Discovery Center at Point Breeze and St. Michaels Farm Sharing Garden, in a radio interview featured on Into The Garden with Phil Getty.

      

Scenes, above, from the celebration and inaugural tour on October 1,
of the newly planted garden and it’s first harvest season.
Participants learned about the vision and elements of the garden
and its bounty of historically-significant produce.

 

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BACKGROUND

D&R Greenway Land Trust is an accredited nonprofit that has reached a new milestone of over 22,000 acres of land preserved throughout central New Jersey since 1989. By protecting land in perpetuity and creating public trails, it gives everyone the opportunity to enjoy the great outdoors. The Land Trust’s preserved farms and community gardens provide local organic food for residents of the region—including those most in need. Through strategic land conservation and stewardship, D&R Greenway combats climate change, protects birds and wildlife, and ensures clean drinking water for future generations. D&R Greenway’s mission is centered on connecting land with people from all walks of life.

D&R Greenway’s outdoor trails and labyrinth are open. Visit our Facebook and Instagram pages and www.drgreenway.org to learn about our latest news and other programs and events. D&R Greenway Land Trust, One Preservation Place, Princeton NJ 08540.  The best way to reach D&R Greenway staff is by sending an e-mail to info@drgreenway.org or by calling D&R Greenway at 609-924-4646.

Our Mission: To Preserve & Care for Land and Inspire a Conservation Ethic, Now and Forever

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