Members of the Sequim Prairie Garden Club (SPGC) gather outside the recently renovated clubhouse at Pioneer Memorial Park. Club members say they are excited to celebrate SPGC’s 75th year with a community party set for Saturday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Members of the Sequim Prairie Garden Club (SPGC) gather outside the recently renovated clubhouse at Pioneer Memorial Park. Club members say they are excited to celebrate SPGC’s 75th year with a community party set for Saturday. (Michael Dashiell/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sequim garden club to celebrate its 75th year

Community invited to Saturday gathering

SEQUIM — From seven women in 1947 to about 70 men and women in 2023, the Sequim Prairie Garden Club has grown over the years.

Sequim Prairie Garden Club (SPGC) members — and the community — will mark the club’s 75th anniversary with a celebration from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at Pioneer Memorial Park, 387 E. Washington St.

Exhibits, live music, refreshments and a presentation by gardening guru Ciscoe Morris are planned.

Club leadership

The first president of the SPGC was Martha Clasen in 1948. According to club records, charter members included Martha Clasen, Clara Dawley, Grace Blank, Sophia Blair, Ruth Lochow, Marvel Priest, Nora Lee Klingler, Annie Vail, Carrie Blake and Mary Stone.

Ellen Castleman became the president of the SPGC in June 2023. Castleman said she chose to take over because former president Vina Winters has been serving for six years.

“I love the garden club,” Castleman said. “I think it’s a wonderful organization.”

During her presidency, she said she hopes to get an Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant walkway built around the park and to restore the Pioneer Log Cabin.

Castleman, who worked as a director of radiation therapy in Arizona, first joined the garden club in 2016 because she was looking for things to do and volunteer organizations in the community.

“I’m retired and I wanted to do something totally different than what I ever did in my work life,” she said.

Castleman said one of her favorite memories of being a part of SPGC is the plant sales. The sales typically happen in late April or the first week of May and are held outside.

“It was freezing,” she said. “But the camaraderie that we had out there … you get to talk to the people, and it’s just fun.”

Club meetings

SPGC members meet once each month except for July, and the club hosts a potluck in August.

“We always have a speaker and then we have garden sharing,” Winters said. “People are encouraged to talk about issues and things that work [and] things that don’t work.”

Castleman said some of her favorite speakers are local greenthumbs Andrew May and Leilani Wood.

“She [Wood] brought some of her yard art,” Castleman said. “She takes something that you wouldn’t consider … and she’ll dress it up and put it in her garden.”

The garden club also offers tours, where members can show each other around their personal gardens.

“People love it because you get to go see what somebody else is doing with the area, the climate [and] the plants,” Winters said.

75th anniversary

Morris headlines the club’s Saturday event.

“Usually you would pay like $25 to hear him speak; this is free,” SPGC historian Priscilla Hudson said.

There will also be live music, non-alcoholic refreshments and exhibits at the event, such as weavers, spinners, blacksmiths, quilters and two people who make things out of driftwood, “one that does driftwood art, polishing and design of driftwood,” Hudson said. “The other is a young lady who makes things out of driftwood. She makes huge animals.”

Hudson said this celebration is also a thank you to the community because Sequim helped support the park.

“Yes, the women and garden club were the cohesive glue that kept it going on this side,” Hudson said.

“But if we didn’t have community support, it wouldn’t be there.”

For more about the Sequim Prairie Garden Club, visit sequimprairiegardenclub.org.

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