FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 30, 2012

Contact Jessica Masanotti
PR Communications Manager

jbmasanotti@tescharlotte.org
704.358.8101
Trinity Episcopal School
Trinity Episcopal School and Partners Receive Funding to Launch Collaborative Inner City Garden Initiative  
CHARLOTTE, NC -  St. Peter's Episcopal Church Outreach Commission and St. Peter's Hospital Board have awarded funding totaling $5,500 to St. Peter's Episcopal Church, St. Martin's Episcopal Church, Trinity Episcopal School, First United Methodist Church and Friendship Gardens to launch a collaborative Inner City Garden Initiative.

 

The mission of the Initiative is to establish gardens in First Ward that will serve recipients of Friendship Trays, First Ward residents and students. The gardens will create opportunities for volunteers to join together and work side by side to grow fresh, healthy, local food. The first garden will be located on 8th Street near Trinity Episcopal School. In addition to providing food for those in need, the 8th Street garden will be a new outdoor classroom for Trinity's Wildcat Gardening curriculum.  

 

"Joining forces with our neighbors, Friendship Gardens and friends at St. Peter's Episcopal, St. Martin's Episcopal and First United Methodist Churches, also helps us to sustain our gardens throughout the summer months when our students are not on campus," says Mary Kluttz, associate academic dean at Trinity Episcopal School.

 

The 8th Street garden will feature a Three Sisters Garden, planted and nurtured by Trinity kindergartners; hydroponic plants transplanted from the second-grade classroom; and a North Carolina vegetable garden, planted and harvested by fourth-graders, and will be bordered by espaliered fruit trees and blueberry bushes. There will be a work area for teaching, composting and other garden chores.  

 

Nancy Duncan, Trinity parent and project coordinator, says, "The gardens will create opportunities for volunteers and students to get to know their neighbors and to cross socio-economic lines and work along side one another to grow fresh, healthy, local food for those in need."

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CALL FOR VOLUNTEERS - Anyone interested in getting involved or supporting the project should contact coordinators Ann Bass at 704. 996. 2398, or Nancy Duncan at InnerCityGardens4@gmail.com.

 

Inner City Garden Initiative organizers have planned a community workday for Saturday, Feb. 4. Many volunteers are needed to prepare the planting beds and to install gravel on the paths in the outdoor classroom. Volunteers are asked to arrive by 10am and bring water, shovels, hard rakes, gloves and wheelbarrows. Lunch will be provided by Harvest Moon Grille. Parking is available in the Trinity Episcopal School parking lot at 750 E. 9th Street. Volunteers should meet organizers at the 8th Street side of the hedges near the School's playground.  

 

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Founded in 2000 with 102 students, Trinity Episcopal School currently has 415 students enrolled in grades K-8. Trinity's curriculum emphasizes creative and critical thinking. The campus is located at 750 E. 9th Street in the Garden District of Uptown Charlotte's First Ward neighborhood, with the entire Center City as an extended classroom for cultural enrichment, hands-on learning and opportunities to serve. For more information on Trinity Episcopal School, please visit us at www.tescharlotte.org, or give us a call at 704. 358. 8101.

Creating Scholars, Nurturing Spirituality and Embracing Diversity in Charlotte's Center City