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hen
you become a member of the Garfield Park Conservatory
Alliance, you’ll have access to some of the most beautiful
landscape architecture in the world and a collection of the
most exotic plants ever found under glass … and that’s just
during normal visiting hours!
Support Educational Programs and Events
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membership
in the Garfield Park Conservatory Alliance supports
one of Chicago's great botanical resources. So step
into our world and step into another place and time,
where it's always warm and lush, where you will be
surrounded by some of the most historic and dramatic
architecture of our time.
When you
give to the
Garfield Park Conservatory Alliance by becoming
a member, or by donating to our Annual Fund, you’ll
have the satisfaction of knowing exactly where your
contribution is headed – right back into the life of
this
historic Conservatory and our local
Chicago community.
Your
gift brings incredibly diverse, world-class exhibits
to Chicago, from Dale Chihuly’s breathtaking
Garden of Glass, to the evocative Zimbabwean stone
sculpture of Chapungu, to the newly
discovered dinosaurs of GIANTS.
Your
gift also creates exciting, innovative, and
educational activities like
Morning Glories, our morning reading
program for kids ages two to five, and
BUGs (Building Urban Gardens), our
popular annual gardening series for adults. With
your generosity, we can keep growing!
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Member Benefits:

Free guest passes to special exhibits, like
GIANTS: African Dinosaurs at the Garfield Park
Conservatory.
A subscription to Greenscapes, our quarterly
members-only magazine.
Additional discounts and advanced notice of the
Garfield Park Conservatory's exciting workshops and
classes.
A 10% discount in the Garfield Park Conservatory's
Gift Shop - and an additional 50% off selected items
every Tuesday!
Invitations to all members-only events and
previews.
Free or reduced admission at over 150
reciprocal gardens
and arboretums nationwide.
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Choosing the Right Membership For You
All levels receive the benefits of all preceding levels.
Seedling
Membership ($25/year) – receive all Member Benefits
listed in the box above, along with one membership card.
Flower
Membership ($50/year) – receive all Member Benefits, a
second membership card for someone else, and a coupon for a
free Garfield Park Conservatory keychain from our Gift Shop.
Fern
Membership ($100/year) – receive all Member Benefits, a
second membership card for someone else, a coupon for a free
Garfield Park Conservatory tote bag from our Gift Shop, and
your name listed in our Annual Report
Palm
Membership ($250/year) – receive the same benefits as a
Fern membership, a total of four membership cards, and an
invitation to our annual Donor Reception.
Director’s
Club Membership ($500/year) – receive the same
benefits as a Palm membership, plus a free guided tour of
the Conservatory (by appointment).
Please see the “Jensen
Club Membership” section at the top of this page if you
are interested in learning about joining at a higher level.

Chihuly glass sculpture in
Fern Room
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MEMBERSHIP LINKS
JENSEN CLUB Membership
onors
of $1,000 or more are eligible to become members of the
Jensen Club, a group of individuals committed to the
preservation of landscape architect Jens Jensen’s original
vision of the Conservatory.
Jensen
designed and built the
Garfield Park Conservatory in 1908 with the urban
dweller in mind – as a place where people would come to get
away from the hustle and bustle of the city, a place to
rejuvenate the mind and soothe the soul.

As a
Jensen Club member, you will be invited to VIP preview
events and special exhibitions, the annual breakfast with
the Directors in May, and a special “Behind the Scenes” tour
at the Conservatory.
For more
information email
Katherine Schultz or
call (773) 638-1766, ext. 13.

Photos: (top)
Jens Jensen (bottom) Fern Room C.1957
Julia S. Bachrach: Chicago Park District Historian
JENS JENSEN
"Friend of the Native Landscape", by Julia Sniderman
Bachrach Chicago Park District Historian
Chicago
underwent rapid development during the late nineteenth
century, many people felt proud of the changes the city was
experiencing. Tall buildings, the elevated railway system,
improved roads, and a new drainage system all signified that
Chicago was becoming one of the nation’s premier cities.
Within
this context, however, a Danish immigrant, Jens Jensen
(1860-1951), saw the quickly disappearing native landscape
as a resource to be revered, idealized, and preserved.
Jensen is now considered dean of the Prairie style of
landscape architecture, leader of the Midwestern
conservation movement, and is remembered as a significant
Chicago social reformer.
Today,
the City of Chicago's Department of Cultural Affairs and
Chicago Park District have formed the Jens Jensen Legacy
Project to inspire current generations about this
influential designer and conservationist.
From Laborer to Superintendent
Born into
a prosperous family in Slesvig, Denmark, Jens Jensen
emigrated to the United States in 1884 with his fiancée,
Anne Marie Hansen. After brief periods in Florida and Iowa,
the young couple settled in Chicago where Jensen found
employment as a laborer for the West Park Commission.
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