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HORTICULTURE AND AUBURN UNIVERSITY
ARE IN EDDIE ALDRIDGE’S BLOOD.
His father, Loren L., had earned his agricultural science degree
at AU in 1926, back when it was Alabama Polytechnic Institute,
and had owned and operated a greenhouse and |
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nursery business in
Bessemer with his wife, Zeta, since the late 1920s. Eddie’
s older brother, Mac—short for Loren McTyeire Aldridge—had
graduated from Auburn in 1950 with a degree in ornamental horticulture
and was working at the Aldridge operation.
So when the younger Aldridge entered AU as a freshman in 1952,
majoring in ornamental horticulture, he was carrying on something
of a family tradition. But during Eddie’s freshman year,
Mac died of a long-misdiagnosed brain tumor. Although the younger
Aldridge remained at Auburn for two more years, Mac’s
death led him to decide to put college on hold and join the
U.S. Army. When he returned
home from a two-year tour of duty in California and Germany,
Aldridge went straight to work at Aldridge Garden Shop and Nurseries,
which his parents had opened across from Vulcan Park in Birmingham
in 1954 as one of the first full-scale garden centers in the
country. “There wasn’t
a question of whether I was going back to Auburn, because I
wasn’t,” says Aldridge. “With the garden center,
we were deep in debt. That was where I had to be.” (And
he did have the opportunity to finish college, earning a degree
in business from Birmingham Southern College in 1959.)
By the time Eddie Aldridge “retired”
in the mid-1990s, the highly respected horticulturist had devoted
more than 40 years of his life to the nursery business and was
an industry leader, one of his most noted accomplishments coming
in 1971 when he patented and introduced the now-popular Snowflake
hydrangea (Hydrangea querifolia ‘Snowflake’).
He is a past president of the Alabama Nurserymen’s Association
(ANA) and in 1999 was presented the W. Kelley Mosley Environmental
Award in recognition of his wise and creative use of natural
resources and his contributions to Alabama’s natural environment.
Most recently, the ANA presented Aldridge its prestigious Lifetime
Achievement Award. Aldridge
tends toward modesty when it comes to his achievements and to
the success of the Aldridge business, which a July 2002 Birmingham
Business Journal article, in announcing the closing of Aldridge
Garden Shop and Nursery, called “one of Birmingham’s
best-known nurseries,” “a perennial bloomer”
and “a gardening empire.”
But Aldridge isn’t hesitant at all when it comes to telling
about the day in February 1977 that he stumbled upon the pot
of gold at the end of the proverbial rainbow.
It was on that day that Aldridge learned that the Lyl Coxe estate,
a magnificent piece of property located in the middle of Hoover,
Ala., might be for sale. He had caught his first glimpse of
the place in 1966, when the owner hired him to plant three magnolia
trees on the banks of the estate’s 6.5-acre spring-fed
lake, and had been blown away by its natural beauty. Aldridge
made a few calls and learned that the property had been sold—to
a developer who intended to put an apartment complex on it,
no less!—but that the deal had fallen through. Aldridge
wasted no time in making an offer.
“I got my dad to go look at it with me, and he said, ‘You
ought to buy this property; it could be a public garden someday,’”
Aldridge recalls. But in
that 30-acre Garden of Eden, it was not good that man should
be alone. Not long after he bought the property he met a woman
named Kay—the most charming woman he’d ever met.
They married at the home in 1981. Over the years, the Aldridges
continually enhanced their one-of-a-kind sanctuary, building
walking trails and planting multitudes of trees, flowers and
ornamentals—most prominent among them the Snowflake hydrangea.
Even as the couple worked
to enhance the natural beauty of their property, though, Aldridge
remembered his now-deceased father’s comments about the
estate’s potential as a public garden.
In 1995, they made that dream a reality by conveying the land
and house to the City of Hoover, with the key stipulation that
the site, Aldridge Gardens, would be forever be a public garden—one
that showcases hydrangeas, naturally.
Under the agreement with the
City of Hoover, Aldridge Gardens, a non- profit organization,
is managed by a 14-member board, of which Aldridge is a member.
Beginning this year, students from Auburn University will be
an active part of the garden’s development, thanks to
an innovative Aldridge Family Internship Program the Aldridges
recently established, largely to honor the late Loren L. and
Zeta McTyeire Aldridge. The program will give select AU students
studying horticulture, botany, landscape design, forestry or
plant science the opportunity to gain a semester’s worth
of real-world experience working full time, with pay, at the
gardens. The interns
will work under the immediate supervision of Jared Wade, a 2003
AU horticulture graduate and Aldridge Gardens’ first full-time
horticulturist. Full oversight of the program, however, will
be among the responsibilities of the highly qualified individual
chosen to be the Loren McTyeire Aldridge Faculty Chair in the
AU Department of Horticulture, a seat the Aldridges are creating
through a $1 million endowment in memory of Mac—the older
brother Aldridge lost 52 years ago.
“Mac never had the chance to make his contributions to
horticulture,” Aldridge says. “This is our way of
honoring his memory.”
In addition to the endowed faculty chair and the internship
program, the Aldridges are establishing a number of scholarships
for horticulture majors.
“Our hope is that, by making these opportunities available,
we can help attract students to the horticulture program at
Auburn,” Aldridge says. “It is a wonderful field.”
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