America Grows
Garfield Park Conservatory Panel Discussion
Wednesday, July 8
6 – 7:30 p.m.
Garfield Park Conservatory
Wednesday, July 8
6 – 7:30 p.m.
Garfield Park Conservatory
Gardens tell stories far beyond what’s planted in the soil. They hold memory, tradition, survival, creativity, and care passed across generations.
Join the Chicago Botanic Garden for a conversation exploring the deep connections between Black American history, land, food, and community in the Midwest and Chicago.
As the Garden marks 250 years of gardening in the U.S., this conversation explores the many ways Black communities have shaped gardening, food traditions, and relationships to land across generations. From Southern agricultural knowledge carried north during the Great Migration to present-day urban farming and food access work in Chicago, the panel will trace how gardens have long served as spaces of nourishment, creativity, resilience, and community.
Featuring a scholar, a Chicago-based urban agriculture leader, and a culinary cultural voice, the discussion brings together history, lived experience, and contemporary community work to explore:
- the agricultural knowledge and cooperative traditions rooted in Black communities
- the role of gardens and urban agriculture in creating access, connection, and neighborhood care
- the ways food traditions preserve memory, culture, and celebration across generation
Together, the panel will reflect on what it means to cultivate belonging through land, food, and community, and how Black gardening traditions continue to shape the cultural life of cities like Chicago today.




