Victorious Garden Project Grows Food and Community

August 24, 2012 by


Photo courtesy of LaManda Joy

I’ve just returned from Chicago, where I spent some time with my friend, LaManda Joy, Founder and President of The Peterson Garden Project, a revival Victory Garden venture she conceived in 2010 to encourage new generations of urbanites to grow their own food. While there, Joy shared with me the city’s neighborhoods and gardens, including several that The Peterson Garden Project has transformed from trash-filled vacant lots into productive community gardens.


Young boy tends garden at the Peterson Project Global Garden. Photo: Robin Horton for Urban Gardens.


Montrose Garden transformation…Photos courtesy of Peterson Garden Project.

The Seed of an Idea
Two years ago, while on the road significantly for business, Joy’s husband suggested that since she loved gardening, she might occupy her evenings researching the history of victory gardens. She did, and in the process discovered that from 1942-1945 an empty lot on Chicago’s Peterson Avenue was part of an original WWII Victory Garden. This historical factoid propelled Joy to approach Chicago Alderman Pat O’Connor asking for his assistance in negotiating with the lot owners to obtain approval for its conversion into a modern day victory garden. The Alderman was overwhelmingly supportive, the property owners agreed, a waiver of liability was signed, and the Peterson Garden Project was born–or perhaps “reborn.”


The original Peterson Garden at corner of Peterson and Campbell. Photo: Maribeth B.


LaManda Joy, Founder and President of The Peterson Garden Project. Photo courtesy of LaManda Joy.

Victory Then…
During WWII, to help overcome wartime food shortages, the government encouraged Americans to grow their own fruits and vegetables in “Victory Gardens.”  In the name of patriotism, nearly 20 million Americans responded. They pooled resources and planted away in backyards, empty lots, and rooftops. Overnight, urban dwellers became farmers.

…And Victory Now
Joy’s parents, who taught her to garden, are one of her biggest inspirations. “My parents grew up during World War II,” Joy told me. “Like everyone in that generation, if there was a problem, they stepped up to fix it. When I spoke to my mother about food issues, she just said to me, ‘a little less talk, a little more action.'”


LaManda Joy’s mother in her garden, January 1967. Photo courtesy of LaManda Joy.

Joy’s vision is for Chicago’s urban residents to become farmers like they were 70 years ago–this time in temporary pop-up gardens lasting through the growing season. Even those Chicagoans with no gardening experience are profiting from the experience as they learn “from the ground up.”

The original Peterson Avenue garden no longer exists, but what began as a single garden has now evolved into a project, consisting of five gardens on Chicago’s underserved north side and another 3-5 projected for next year.


In addition to growing food, the gardens offer members an opportunity for self-expression. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.


The fruits of their labors at the Global Garden. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.


Gardener at Vegedwater Gardens. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.

Learning in Style Outside the Garden
In a short time, The Peterson Garden Project is well on its way, not just in delivering its message about the importance of growing one’s own food, but also in cultivating community. And they are doing so in style. Witness the project’s new Learning Center where a team of friends and volunteers directed by Patrick Ewing and Mark Kanazawa, transformed an entire raw space using only found and recycled materials.


For a GardenChat party at the Learning Center, ordinary cans upcycled into lights. Photo: robin Horton, Urban Gardens.

The talented Ewing-Kanazawa duo come equipped with some creative expertise: when they are not dumpster diving for pallets and other usable objects in and around Chicago’s back allies, Patrick is Windows Manager for the Ralph Lauren Chicago flagship store and Mark is Toy & General Gift Buyer for the Field Museum Stores. So designing planters from pallets, lights from rusted tin cans, upcycling ladders into magazine racks and tin drums into cocktail tables, comes quite naturally to the two Peterson volunteers.


Creative team, volunteers Patrick Ewing and Mark Kanazawa. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.


A fence at the learning Center with hanging mason jars and Authentic Haven Brand manure teas. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.


Discarded alcohol drums from the Field Museum painted and repurposed into tables. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.  

In addition to classes, the Learning Center will offer roundables on specific topics with experts in the field, will feature authors, and show films. Community building events like Food Swaps are in the works, where individuals will exchange homegrown and homemade foods. There are more plant sales planned and perhaps a holiday market featuring artists in the gardens.

Sowing Stories
To broaden the message about urban vegetable gardening, The Peterson Garden Project has partnered to establish the The Edible Treasures Garden, a community garden on the West Terrace of the Chicago Field Museum, one of the country’s greatest natural history museums.


LaManda Joy and Diane Diane Ott Whealey from Seed Savers at The Edible Treasures Garden. Photo: Field Museum.

In partnership with the Field Museum, Jewell Events & Catering, and Seed Savers Exchange (SSE), the largest non-profit seed bank in the United States, this Peterson Garden Project effort will introduce visitors to the value and diversity of heirloom seeds.


Edible Treasures Garden at Field Museum. Photo: Field Museum.

Focusing on growing “seeds with stories,” SSE founder Diane Ott Whealey selected heirloom edible plants to demonstrate how seed saving allows gardeners to preserve history by passing down specific homegrown vegetables from generation to generation.

Museum employees donate their time to tend the garden which was designed (drawing above) by Hoerr Schaudt Landscape Architects, installed by Kemora Landscape Designs, and featured in a video by Dig In Chicago, a new TV program for the windy city’s area outdoor enthusiasts about enjoying outdoor living spaces.

A Growing Project
“We’ll continue to fine tune food education,” explained Joy when I asked her what was in store down the road. “And we are considering adding a cooking component.” The cooking piece is such a natural extension for this program–learning first where your food comes from, then learning to prepare it. If you are a regular reader here, you know that I love the synergy and interconnection between growing, cooking, and serving. Who knows, perhaps there’ll be a Peterson Garden Project Café in the future?


Montrose garden member, Matthew, shows me his harvest. Photo: Robin Horton, Urban Gardens.

“Okay…coming in this evening was quite spectacular,” recounted Les, a Peterson Garden volunteer. “People were already working in the garden and as time went on, people were bringing in plants, shovels, and their excited faces; ready to plant in their wonderful garden space! Definitely was a great feeling just watching these people. I didn’t even work on my plot because I didn’t want to take up any shovels or wheelbarrows, they seem so happy to work and I didn’t want to stop them!!! So fun and I’m so happy to be part of this. I just kept thinking as the next group kept coming, about the movie “Field of Dreams,” …”if you build it, they will come.”

11 Comments »

  1. Sarit said:

    Beautiful idea… Very inspiring indeed!

    — August 24, 2012 @ 15:41

  2. Mary Ann said:

    What a great project! Wow. Love everything about it. May steal the idea for those painted drum tables. Good job!

    — August 25, 2012 @ 11:15

  3. Annie Haven | Authentic Haven Brand said:

    what a wonderful article on LaManda, the gardeners, volunteers and all that is going on with the Peterson Garden Project. Thank you for the MooPooTea mentions too!

    — August 25, 2012 @ 20:32

  4. Mark & Patrick said:

    Awesome seeing you again and sharing the new PGP Learning Center and Global Gardens with you! We hope that our projects inspire and encourage everyone to turn more “trash” into treasure. Thanks for spreading the good word!

    — August 26, 2012 @ 20:59

  5. Andrea said:

    Yes that is awesome, I hope it evolve in more and more spaces! That will at least sequester some carbons that their cars have been producing for a long time. It can at least alleviate a little bit of their bad footprints into more responsible ones!

    — August 29, 2012 @ 01:11

  6. Absolute Condos said:

    Beautiful Idea. Thanks for sharing

    — August 29, 2012 @ 23:05

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