Kingwood Center

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Kingwood Center
(U.S. Registered Historic District)
Kingwood Center mansion and gardens
Kingwood Center mansion and gardens
Location: Mansfield, Ohio
Coordinates: 40°45′36″N 82°32′52″W / 40.76, -82.54778Coordinates: 40°45′36″N 82°32′52″W / 40.76, -82.54778
Built/Founded: 1926
Architect: C. Mack
Architectural style(s): Colonial Revival, Other
Added to NRHP: November 07, 1976
NRHP Reference#: 76001523

[1]

Governing body: Private
Kingwood Center visitors welcome sign.

The Kingwood Center is an historic 47 acre site with house, gardens and greenhouses, located at 900 Park Avenue West in Mansfield, Ohio.

The house and grounds were built in 1926 for Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kelley King, with grounds designed by Cleveland landscape architecture firm Pitkin and Mott.

On November 07, 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places

Contents

[edit] Current

In 1953 the estate became a public garden. The gardens are now open daily without charge. Estate grounds currently include the following collections:

  • Daylily and Iris Collection - about 200 daylily cultivars, 54 Siberian iris cultivars, 50 cultivars of tall bearded iris, and 10 cultivars of reblooming tall bearded iris.
  • Historic Garden (1926) - a sequence of connected "rooms" enclosed by hedges, each built around a central feature such as a sunken garden, a small circular pool, a swimming pool, or a bronze sculpture of Pan.
  • Parterre - boxwood edging filled with seasonal tulips and annuals.
  • Peony Garden - over 170 cultivars of herbaceous peonies.
  • Perennial Garden - over 300 varieties of perennial plants in large borders.
  • Terrace (1994) - seasonal beds of tulips and annuals, with a variety of shrubs.
  • Tropical House - tropical plants, including Acalypha hispida (chenille plant), Acalypha wilkesiana 'Obovata Cristata' (copperleaf), Anthurium (flamingo flower), Codiaeum (croton), Cordyline terminalis 'Fire Brand' (ti tree), Dichorisandra warscewicziana (blue ginger), Ficus deltoidea (mistletoe fig), Jatropha integerrima (spicy jatropha), Justicia brandegeana (shrimp plant), and Rivina humilis (blood berry).
  • Woodland - currently under development.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2008-04-15).

[edit] External links

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