|  This year's event provides walk-through tours of 11 private gardens, 
			all within convenient driving distance from one another. The garden 
			walk will take place rain or shine. The hours are 1-8 p.m. June 21 
			and 9 a.m.-5 p.m. June 22. This year's theme is "A Community of Gardens." From the whimsical 
			to the classical, the gardens offer an abundance of flowers, water 
			features, garden art and unique plants. The tour features a 
			showstopping garden in a wooded area once owned by the family that 
			built Ewing Manor. Other stops are a Victorian-style house featuring 
			architectural plants and perennials, layered with a virtuosic use of 
			annuals and tropicals; a double-lot garden designed with thoughtful 
			transitions from indoor to outdoor living spaces; a lovely woodsy 
			garden; and much more. Staff representing local landscape sponsors will be on hand to 
			provide expertise and insights. Rain or shine, visitors will be 
			inspired by the creativity of some of the community's most talented 
			gardeners.  
			 The walk is a fundraiser for the David Davis Mansion Foundation, 
			which provides private support for the state-operated historic site.
			 Tickets are $15 in advance, $18 the weekend of the event and $7 
			for anyone under 18. The tickets may be purchased in advance at the 
			Garlic Press and Schnucks Supermarket in Normal, and at Casey's 
			Garden Shop, the Copy Shop, Grieder Sod and Landscaping, Schnucks 
			Supermarket, Sunburst Nursery/Penn Landscaping, Wendell Niepagen 
			Greenhouses, and the David Davis Mansion in Bloomington.  Tickets may also be purchased
			online 
			at 
			www.daviddavismansion.org or at the David Davis Mansion the 
			weekend of the event.  The garden walk begins on the grounds of the David Davis Mansion 
			at 1000 Monroe Drive in Bloomington. Easy ticket and map pickup, 
			with drive-thru service and free parking on the mansion grounds, is 
			available during the entire event weekend.  Garden walk participants may also shop at the gardening 
			marketplace on the mansion lawn. Some of the vendors and artisans 
			taking part are All Glass Flowers, Green View Landscaping, Ecology 
			Action Center, Fused Glass, Jim's Ornamental Garden Iron and craft 
			demonstrations by Joe Ramholz. 
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			 Visitors can enjoy complimentary tea and desserts served under a 
			tent on the mansion lawn. Tours of Sarah's Garden will be conducted 
			by members of the University of Illinois Extension Master Gardeners 
			in McLean County, and visitors can learn from these experts how to 
			make their own Victorian gardens using heirloom plants from Thomas 
			Jefferson's Monticello and other famous American gardens. Guided 
			tours of the Davis Mansion will also be offered. WJBC-AM and FM will 
			do a live remote broadcast from the lawn of the Davis Mansion during 
			the garden walk. Corporate sponsors for the Glorious Garden Festival are Casey's 
			Garden Shop, Chizmar Landscaping, Green View Companies, Grieder Sod 
			& Landscaping, Original Smith Printing, Solid Ground Gardening, 
			Sunburst Nursery/Penn Landscaping, Wendell Niepagen Greenhouses and 
			Garden Center, WJBC-AM 1230 & FM 93.7, and Zimmerman & Armstrong 
			Investment Advisors Inc. Over the past 16 years, more than 16,000 visitors have toured 
			Bloomington-Normal's most beautiful private gardens, generating 
			nearly $186,000 for the nonprofit David Davis Mansion Foundation.
			 Proceeds from this year's event will support restoration of the 
			historic Sarah's Garden, a long-term project that involves research 
			and the reintroduction of difficult-to-find heirloom plants and 
			seeds. Proceeds will also be used to develop new school programs 
			featuring the garden and to help keep the mansion open to the 
			public. 
			 The 
			David Davis Mansion State Historic Site, administered by the 
			Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, was built in 1872 for Supreme 
			Court Justice David Davis and his wife, Sarah. The site is open 
			Wednesday through Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. for free public 
			tours. 
            [Text from file received from the 
			Illinois Historic Preservation Agency] |