Richmond Hill Garden Club

Richmond Hill Garden Club Started in 1955 by Frances Meeks. We meet the 2nd Wednesday of every month at the Wetlands Center. Gregory Park.

The Richmond Hill Garden Club, which was founded by Frances Meeks, got its start in 1955 when the mission was to teach members the art of flower arranging. Back then, club members were often called upon to handle flower arrangements for local weddings and other events. As Richmond Hill grew and florists started appearing, the club's mission evolved. Efforts today are directed at conservation and c

ommunity improvement. Members planted the garden at Richmond Hill Primary School and contributed to the Wetlands Center in J.F. Their handiwork exists at all schools and the library.

This evening The Richmond Hill Garden club had the privilege of presenting The Mary Burns $1000 scholarship to RHHS grad...
05/12/2026

This evening The Richmond Hill Garden club had the privilege of presenting The Mary Burns $1000 scholarship to RHHS graduating senior Elizabeth Latimer

Mary Burns is a long time member of the garden club who served as an officer many times over the years. She is responsible for the first Pumpkin patch that has grown to become a very popular annual event in Richmond Hill

04/22/2026

There's a woman in Hillsborough named Phyllis Simon who has raised and released more than 200 monarchs from her own backyard. She calls the property The Butterfly House.
It's one stop on something called the Butterfly Highway — and if you live in North Carolina, you've probably driven past one of these without knowing what you were looking at.
The Butterfly Highway is a statewide project run by the North Carolina Wildlife Federation. The concept is disarmingly simple: build a network of "pit stops" — yards, balconies, school gardens, roadside strips, churchyards, anything — where a migrating monarch can actually find milkweed and nectar. Register your patch, plant the right native species, put up the little sign, and you become part of the map.
As of the latest count, more than 3,400 pit stops have been registered across the state.
What makes this so interesting is what it quietly assumes about the problem. Monarch decline isn't really about one big missing forest somewhere. It's about fragmentation — an insect that needs to travel thousands of miles through a landscape that got chopped into parking lots, subdivisions, sprayed cornfields, and manicured lawns.
A single milkweed plant in a single yard doesn't matter much. But 3,400 of them, stitched together along roadside plantings and urban greenways and rural farm edges, start to look like a corridor. That's the trick.
The Butterfly Highway was started in 2016 by a doctoral student, Angel Hjarding, who was researching monarch decline in Charlotte and decided the research wasn't enough. The whole thing costs nothing to join. There's no minimum acreage. Your apartment balcony qualifies.
Which is the other reason this project has quietly worked — it lets regular people do something concrete instead of just reading another bad news article about insect collapse.
What you're seeing on that sign next to somebody's petunias isn't decoration. It's a piece of a 3,000-mile migration route that hasn't broken yet, partly because a growing number of people decided their front yard could be a rest stop for something on its way to Mexico.

The Richmond Hill Garden Club is accepting applications for our annual $1000 scholarship for graduating RHHS seniors tha...
04/19/2026

The Richmond Hill Garden Club is accepting applications for our annual $1000 scholarship for graduating RHHS seniors that are planning to study agriculture or gardening

The native garden at Henderson park is starting to bloom 🌱🌸🌻🌼
04/14/2026

The native garden at Henderson park is starting to bloom 🌱🌸🌻🌼


04/04/2026

Big thank you to the Richmond hill community and businesses that supported a very successful Spring plant sale !!
With the community's help we can continue to support so many groups and schools in Richmond Hill ❤️❤️

Zach Martin has donated an original painting for the silent auction Richmond Hill Garden Club 4th annual Spring Plant Sa...
04/01/2026

Zach Martin has donated an original painting for the silent auction
Richmond Hill Garden Club 4th annual Spring Plant Sale
April 4th 9am -1pm
JF Gregory park


A long time supporter of the Richmond Hill Garden Club has made a donation to the silent auction at The Richmond Hill Ga...
03/27/2026

A long time supporter of the Richmond Hill Garden Club has made a donation to the silent auction at The Richmond Hill Garden Clubs Spring Plant sale
April 4th 9am -1pm
JF Gregory Park


Address

Richmond Hill, GA
31324

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Richmond Hill Garden Club posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share