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This Richmond park was famous for its azalea festival. So what happened?

Posted at 12:15 AM, Apr 07, 2017
and last updated 2017-04-07 08:19:54-04

RICHMOND, Va. -- A half-century ago, the Azalea Gardens at Bryan Park drew people by the thousands this time of year.

Some 77 azalea beds over 17 acres!

Some weekends in the '60s and '70s, as many as 60,000 people would come.

If you didn't know, the azalea garden was started 65 years ago by the green-thumbed Robert H. Harvey, the city's superintendent of grounds and structure, a man of vision. He was so devoted to it, his wife smilingly called herself "an azalea widow."

In 1972, the city held it's first Bryan Park Azalea Arts and Crafts festival, a popular event for a decade.

Mark Holmberg at Bryan Park

Mark Holmberg at Bryan Park

And then came Richmond's murder spell, incompetence in city hall and years of neglect.

The azalea gardens all but disappeared. The pond beside them silted in and began collapsing, its fountain a memory.

But the gardens and the park have made an oh-so-slow but steady comeback, thanks to volunteers and city workers.

Still, it remains a shadow of itself in a park that has seen a small invasion of new users and neighbors, many of them ready to be a part of this huge and largely overlooked corner of the city.

Bed 57 at Bryan Park

Bed 57 at Bryan Park

What - or who - would it take to bring back this cool place of beauty and wonder to it's former glory?

It should and can happen.

Check out the video!

Click here to see more of Mark Holmberg’s reports.

Joseph Bryan Park

Joseph Bryan Park