Vel's Purple Oasis Vegetable Garden & Community Teaching Kitchen

Vel's Purple Oasis Vegetable Garden & Community Teaching Kitchen Vel’s Purple Oasis Garden is a blend of market and community gardening and is a living example of sustainability and healthy living. This is just the beginning.

Vel's Purple Oasis is a community-based urban farm situated on one acre of land where Cleveland's Fairfax neighborhood meets University Circle. Gardening first began at the Oasis in April of 2008, as a way to get members of the surrounding community involved with each other and to promote a healthy lifestyle through growing and eating high-quality produce. Within three years the Oasis developed pa

rtnerships with the Green Triangle permaculture designers, John Hay High School Environmental Club, the Ronald McDonald House, the New Agrarian Center, and the Prevention Research Center for Healthy Neighborhoods. Since the garden began in the spring of 2008, it has grown in "leaps and bounds". Each year a new component has evolved. In June of 2009, a "Straw-bale Greenhouse" was built at the garden through the efforts of Brad Masi, who at that time was director of the Agrarian Center in Oberlin, Ohio. along with Hank Habermann and the Green Triangle Permaculture Group, and John Fellerstein's John Hay High School's Environmental Class, hundreds of volunteers came from around the country, as far away as Mississippi, to make history at the Oasis. It took a week of preparation to lay the foundation for the greenhouse. Neighbors, strangers and even young kids came to help us build trenches for our exciting adventure. Over the span of a weekend - two beautiful days on a Saturday and Sunday, the Straw-bale Greenhouse was built. It was unbelievable to see "something new - something healthful" being built in the heart of the city by so many people, from so many places, who gave up their weekend for the health and wealth of a community. As we all know, "Health is wealth". We are a rich, happy and healthier community because so many people cared. Since the er****on of the greenhouse, we have had workshops and classes on how to extend the growing season by starting our seeds and plant as early as March. Our neighborhood kids are in awe that it's cool in the summertime, and warm in the wintertime when its freezing outside. In 2009 Don and Vel Scott attended the Market Gardening course offered by Ohio State University Extension. This was a very intense, informative 12-week course. Having successfully completed this course, we received our first grant - $3,000.00 from the City of Cleveland's Greenback For Dollars program, which helped us buy tools and a wonderful shed for the garden. New Image Lifeskills Academy, Inc. (NILSA), a non-profit organization founded by the Scotts' in 2002, rescued a home in the neighborhood - directly across the street from the garden, on Colonial Court, to be used as an educational center to prep fresh food from the garden, and also as a place that cooking classes can be held for residents to learn how to prepare healthy meals from foods not only from the garden, but from local food banks. It has become a place of peace and tranquility for people to come "Just as they are"; have a cool fresh summer salad, or a hot bowl of soup and cornbread on a cold winter day. The house is called "The Don Scott House". Don's vision, tremendous business background and love of people, is why we are the caretakers of the land on which the garden sits. Don never believed that you could actually own a piece "Mother Earth" but that you could purchase it, pay the taxes on it, and then share it with others. Much has been done in The Don Scott House since 2009. Jim Baker, the next door neighbor to the house, has been the lead person in the renovation process. He has almost single-handily renovated the upstairs - taking down old wallpaper, slats and rugs. Again, volunteers came from "out of nowhere" to help put this home back together again. Oberlin College's Environmental Studies class became regulars in helping. Bus loads of students from Professor Janet Fisco's class helped us, again along with neighborhood residents, to create an "Earthen Plaster" wall in keeping with our greening movement. When I think of "Earth Angels" which I strongly believes in, I think of a young student named Mackenzie Brown from Seattle, Washington,
who came up with the Oberlin students, who made a major financial contribution to the DSH through a foundation grant she received. This turned the house into the home that we envisioned. At the present time, we still need more funds to complete the house, probably around $15,000.00. But, we are on our way. And as my grandmother used to say, "By hook or crook" let's say its going to be by "hook", we'll get the funds to complete this wonderful home.

02/12/2026
SPRING‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️
02/12/2026

SPRING‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️

Count down every day to Spring, with your own customizable countdown clock.

36 DAYS BEFORE SPRING🎉
02/12/2026

36 DAYS BEFORE SPRING🎉

Cornucopia🎉  What a great series of Klasses Kooking snd Kulture.REAL FOOD FOR YOUR BEST LIFE.A decade ago😍
02/12/2026

Cornucopia🎉 What a great series of Klasses Kooking snd Kulture.
REAL FOOD FOR YOUR BEST LIFE.

A decade ago😍

02/12/2026

OBERLIN🎉

11/27/2025

FOLLOWED HIS CAREER. A great human being.

04/28/2025

🎉

04/28/2025
A huge Thank You to SPACES, Those Who Nourish, Cooking Sections, Imani and "All" for this amazing opportunity.
10/29/2024

A huge Thank You to SPACES, Those Who Nourish, Cooking Sections, Imani and "All" for this amazing opportunity.

09/29/2024

Charles Richard Patterson was the first African American to build motorized cars. His father, Charles Rich Patterson, a former enslaved person, created C. R. Patterson and Sons Company, located in Greenfield, Ohio. Beginning in 1865, the company built fashionable carriages. Frederick Patterson inherited the company upon the death of his father and began building motorized vehicles. The first Patterson automobile, the Patterson-Greenfield, rolled off the line on September 23, 1915. Unfortunately, Henry Ford debuted the Model T on October 1, 1908 and by that point had captured most of the American car-buying market.

Named after the abolitionist Frederick Douglass, Patterson was born on September 17, 1871 in Greenfield, Ohio, the fourth of five children born to Josephine and Charles Richard. His four siblings were Mary, Catherine, Dollie, and Samuel. In 1888, Patterson attended Ohio State University where he played football and may have been the first Black player at the school on the varsity team. In his senior year, he left the university and taught school in Louisville, Kentucky for two years. His passion, however, lay in the family business so he moved home in 1897 and joined his father and brother Samuel at C.R. Patterson and Sons. When his father, the family patriarch, and head of the company died in 1910, Frederick assumed leadership of the business and began to gear up to produce the Patterson-Greenfield automobile.

The Patterson-Greenfield sold for $850 and was reputed to be a higher quality automobile than Henry Ford’s Model T, also known as a “Tin Lizzy.” The Patterson-Greenfield car had a forty horsepower Continental four-cylinder engine and reached a top speed of fifty miles per hour. Unfortunately, the Model T had cornered the automobile market. Initially, it sold for $825 in 1908 when introduced to the public, but by 1915, the year the first Patterson-Greenfield debuted, the price had decreased to $360.

From 1915 to 1920, the company produced 150 Patterson vehicles of two styles, the two-door roadster and the big four-door touring car. The company slogan, “If it’s a Patterson, it’s a good one” described the company’s carriages as well as the motor vehicles. C.R. Patterson and Sons, however, could not obtain capital to continue manufacturing the automobiles. By 1920 it had shifted production to buses and trucks, and Patterson renamed the company to the Greenfield Bus Body Company. During the 1930s, competition from Detroit became increasingly more intense.

Frederick Douglas Patterson, the first African American to build automobiles, died January 18, 1932 at the age of 60. In 1939, the company that had manufactured carriages, automobiles, and buses and trucks, closed its doors after 74 years of providing fine transportation.

Wow‼️💕💕💕💕💕🎉💕💕💕
09/24/2024

Wow‼️💕💕💕💕💕🎉💕💕💕

Community Gardening highlights Ruffin Montessori School students' educational activities @ Vel's Purple Oasis Garden Cleveland, Ohio.

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10837 Frank Avenue
Cleveland, OH
44106

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