Miss May added a sitting room, dining room, bedroom and kitchen to the house to make it comfortable for her family, but did not alter the integrity of the structure. A small outbuilding was built nearby. But her greatest task was to carve trails down into the heart of Laurel land. With help from several hard-working men and a mule, she created her garden. Exotic plants such as azaleas, camellias, wisteria, tea-olives and others were added along the trails. Old railroad ties were used to break the steepness of many trails. A pond was dug, fed by an artesian well. The result was named "Kalmia" for the plentiful laurel Kalmia latifolia that drapes the bluff in a white veil in May.
Since 1935, Kalmia Gardens has been open to the public free of charge from dawn until dusk, every day of the year. The wrought iron gates were crafted around 1935 by Mrs. Frank Tyldesley of Wales to highlight Miss May's favorite flower, the camellia, and they have beckoned to visitors ever since.
A new gate was dedicated to Miss May by her family in 1992, and serves as the main entrance to her great labor of love.
In 1965, Miss May gave Kalmia Gardens to Coker College as a memorial to her late husband. In 1996 a successful Capital Campaign resulted in the renovation of the Hart House and the establishment of a semi-formal Garden and a Sensory Garden. Miss May left a legacy of beauty and discovery for gardeners, nature lovers and scientists alike.
Kalmia Gardens of Coker College is now an outdoor classroom and public garden, hosting many field trips from area schools as well as public programs, tours, symposia, plant sales, festivals and garden parties.
This land continues to hold its centuries-old fascination for the next generation, who will surely keep it as a respite from the busy world that hurriedly passes by its gates.
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