P. Allen Smith

Paul Allen Smith is a television host, designer, gardening and lifestyle expert. He is the host of two public television programs, P. Allen Smith's Garden Home, and P. Allen Smith's Garden to Table and the syndicated 30-minute show Garden Style.[1] His television show P. Allen Smith's Garden Home has been aired on PBS member stations and in syndication on other networks.[2] Smith is one of America's most recognized garden and design experts, providing ideas and inspiration through multiple media venues.[1] He is the author of the best-selling Garden Home series of books published by Clarkson Potter/Random House, including Bringing the Garden Indoors: Container, Crafts and Bouquets for Every Room and threcently published cookbook, Seasonal Recipes from the Garden, inspired by the abundance of food from his farm and a family of cooks. In 2014, Smith's television shows took the Taste Awards by storm with Smith returning to Little Rock with four Taste Awards.[1][3][4][5]

Life and work

Born in Little Rock, and raised in McMinnville, Tennessee, Smith is a fourth-generation nurseryman and horticulturalist. Inspired by a childhood spent on the farm raising and showing livestock and poultry, he has led a life of promoting good stewardship of the earth. In 2009 Smith founded the Heritage Poultry Conservancy, an organization dedicated to the preservation and support of all threatened breeds of domestic poultry. He attended Hendrix College and received a Rotary International Scholarship to study garden design and history at the University of Manchester in England, where he also studied English gardens that had been visited by John Adams and Thomas Jefferson in the 18th century.

After returning to the United States, he entered the nursery and garden-design business with his family in Little Rock, Arkansas, where he focused on reviving interest in perennials. Smith also became a private tour guide to European gardens and started teaching gardening workshops, which then led to appearances on local television shows.

In the half-hour episodes of P. Allen Smith Gardens, he travels to various gardens in many areas of the U.S. and Europe, to explain steps to create garden rooms for dining, entertainment, relaxation, or playing.[2] Some episodes are filmed at the Garden Home Retreat, spanning over 500 acres (200 ha) at Moss Mountain Farm near Little Rock, Arkansas.[1] Smith also hosts his own radio program the P. Allen Smith Show. His design and lifestyle advice is featured in several national magazines.

Smith has also appeared frequently on The Weather Channel, the CBS Early Show, the NBC "Today Show" and other national TV programs teaching viewers gardening and design techniques. He has also written several books on gardening and contributes pieces to numerous publications including Woman's Day and "Southern Living".

Smith's design firm, P. Allen Smith & Associates, specializes in estate master planning, garden design and installation, with projects at public institutions, private corporations and family estates.[6] He is a former Board Member of the Royal Oak Foundation [7][8] (the American partner of England's National Trust[9]) and has contributed to preservation efforts at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello and George Washington's Mt. Vernon among other historic properties. He is a Certified Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society[8][10] and is an Honorary Member of the Garden Club of America.[11] Smith received the Garden Club of America's 'Medal of Honor' in 2006 at the GCA's 93rd Annual Meeting Awards Dinner in Denver, Colorado.[8]

Homes

Located in the historic Quapaw Quarter of Little Rock, Arkansas, the Garden Home is a 1904 Colonial Revival cottage surrounded by a series of garden rooms designed by Smith. He purchased the house for one United States dollar and relocated it to a 15,000-square-foot (1,400 m2) vacant lot.[12] The bargain price was contingent on Allen receiving permission from the local historical commission to move the home from its original site and restore it elsewhere in the city. This garden was created to illustrate his 12 principles of design, the basis of his first book in the Garden Home series.

Smith also built Moss Mountain Farm, also known as The Garden Home Retreat, which is located on the banks of the Arkansas River.[1] It encompasses more than 500 acres of a farm dating back to 1840. The centerpiece is the cottage, built in the American Greek Revival style and constructed in an earth-friendly manner. Directly behind the cottage is the croquet lawn, which is framed by a summer kitchen and art studio. The surrounding garden includes a fountain garden that separates two wings of garden rooms filled with a mix of annuals, herbs, perennials, roses, shrubs and ornamental grasses. Beyond the flower gardens are orchards filled with heritage apple trees, stone fruit and blueberries, acre vegetable gardens, a bluebird trail, wildflower fields and a daffodil hill, which overflows with more than 275,000 daffodils blooming each spring. Various outbuildings, from barns to mobile chicken homes, are located throughout the grounds and surrounding pastures. Moss Mountain Farm is open to the public on select days and is known in Little Rock for its special events and weddings.[13][14]

Career highlights

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "P. Allen Smith | Chefs | PBS Food", PBS.org, 2011, webpage: PASchef.
  2. 1 2 "P. Allen Smith's Garden Home", www.createtv.com, 2011, web: CTV-PASG.
  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5GCNzW43Q0#t=62
  4. http://www.tastyawards.com
  5. http://latinoweeklyreview.com/?p=226805
  6. http://www.pallensmithandassociates.com
  7. http://www.royal-oak.org/index.php
  8. 1 2 3 http://www.pallensmith.com/articles/garden-club-of-americas-medal-of-honor
  9. https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk
  10. http://www.rhs.org.uk
  11. http://www.gcamerica.org
  12. "P. Allen Smith - The Viking Classic", www.vikingclassic.com, 2011, web: VC-GHR, noted "Overlooking the Arkansas River Valley, the Garden Home Retreat... 500 acres of a farm dating back to 1840."
  13. A Beautiful Place, Moss Mountain Weddings (2013) and Moss Mountain Farm Weddings, P Allen Smith (2013)
  14. http://www.pallensmithevents.com

External links

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