HISTORY IF THE GAINESVILLE ORCHID SOCIETY
The Early Years The Gainesville Orchid Society was organized in the early 1960s by a group of approximately 15 orchid enthusiasts. Among those original members were Dr. Tom Sheehan and his wife Marion Ruff Sheehan, Mrs. Ruby Rains, Dr. Henry Wallbrunn, Mr. “Red” Shea, Mrs. T. Lynn Smith, Dr. Joe Beckenbach, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Wise, Dr. and Mrs. Shaw Grigsby, Mrs. Billie Lawson, and Mrs. John Kreager. |
Meetings were initially held at a church on NW 6th St., now Atelier of Amy Berner Interiors. Dues were $2 for individuals and $3 for couples. Meetings in the early days were very much like meetings today, especially the plant table judging. Dr. Henry Wallbrunn, a University of Florida geneticist and well-known orchid hybridizer, often presided over the plant table.
Just like present day, there was good-natured bantering surrounding the discussions over the merits of the best flowers. Dr. Tom Sheehan recollected a plant table discourse where Wallbrunn was extolling the superior qualities of his own Cattleya aclandiae as compared to that of a Cattleya aclandiae brought in by Dr. Joe Beckenbach, then Director of Research at the University of Florida. Beckenbach allowed Wallbrunn to complete the critique, at which point Beckenbach announced that the plant in question was indeed a division of Wallbrunn’s own plant. Dr. Beckenbach, also an orchid hybridizer, was known for his Encyclia crosses, many of which were registered. Beckenbach attempted to develop cold hardiness in tropical orchid hybrids using Encyclia tampensis and Epidendrum magnoliae. |
GOS Today
As membership grew from fifteen to more than one hundred during the 80s and 90s, the meetings were moved to the Doyle Conner Building on SW 34th St. In 2003 the group began meeting at Kanapaha Botanical Gardens on Archer Road. An affiliate of the American, today's members share a wide range of orchid expertise, from hobbyists to commercial growers. |
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