Sculpture gardens in garden fountain setting About 1,445 works of American figurative sculpture are displayed at the
Archer and Anna Hyatt Huntington Sculpture Garden. Many of the works are by Hyatt Huntington, but other artists are also featured. Walkways and garden paths link the sculptures in their distinctive garden, fountain, or landscape settings, with vistas of the scenery surrounding them. A area of Brookgreen Gardens was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1978. • Robert Alexander Baillie •
Gutzon Borglum • Joseph Lorkowski Boulton •
Clio Hinton Bracken •
Cornelia Van Auken Chapin • Henry Clews • Joseph Bailey Ellis •
Sally James Farnham • Joseph Charles Fleri •
Vincent Glinsky • Karl Gruppe •
Ethel Painter Hood •
Edith Howland •
Cecil de Blaquiere Howard •
Anna Hyatt Huntington •
Leo Lentelli •
Donald De Lue • Albino Manca •
Edward Francis McCartan •
Eleanor Mary Mellon •
Roland Hinton Perry •
Attilio Piccirilli •
Furio Piccirilli •
Horatio Piccirilli •
Augustus Saint-Gaudens •
Louis St. Gaudens •
Marion Sanford •
Janet Scudder •
Amory Coffin Simons •
Erwin Springweiler •
Charles Eugene Tefft Lowcountry Trail Winner of the South Carolina Heritage Tourism Award, the Lowcountry Trail is a boardwalk that crosses the hillside overlooking Mainfield, a restored rice field of the former Brookgreen Plantation. For enslaved African Americans on Brookgreen Plantation, this hill was a bridge between the world of daily work and life in the slave village beyond the crest of the hill. The rhythms of life – planting, growing, harvesting, threshing – changed seasonally for everyone on the rice plantation. Archaeological survey and excavation projects have revealed the remains of four structures on the hillside: the site of the overseer's residence at the apex of the hill, and its kitchen, smokehouse and dependency closer to the edge of the rice field. Along the trail, interpretive panels that describe life on a rice plantation and four stainless steel figures have been placed to represent the Plantation Owner, the Overseer, and an Enslaved African Male and an Enslaved African Female. These figures were created in stainless steel by Babette Bloch.
Lowcountry Trail Audio Tour The Lowcountry Trail Audio Tour is a public education program that emphasizes historic preservation. The tour winds along the Ricefield Overlook and adjacent rice field and is free with garden admission.
Zoo and plantation sites The Lowcountry Zoo and the Lowcountry Center are also on the property. 'Trekker tours' are conducted on the backroads of the former plantations. Recent archeological work has uncovered the foundations of several buildings at The Oaks plantation. Ponds have been created from the former 'Brookgreen'
plantation house sites.
Natural areas The Atlantic Coast side of the property was later leased to the state of South Carolina to form
Huntington Beach State Park. Boat tours are available from here with views of
Sandy Island. A self-guided tour of the nature trail shows off the 2000 identified species of life, including
longleaf pines,
Spanish moss draped
live oaks, and vistas of the river, and nearby
marshland. The gardens make every effort to preserve the natural environment.
Nights of a Thousand Candles Every year, the Brookgreen Gardens are lit with more than 2,700 candles and countless lights set among the plants, trees and sculptures of the garden. Tickets for the same are available every year for visitors.
Labyrinth The Labyrinth at Brookgreen Gardens is located along the north end of the Trail Beyond the Garden Wall. It was built in 2009 and underwent a substantial redesign in 2014 under the direction of artist Kenny Pellar. It is maintained today by both staff and volunteers as an oasis for members and guests. The Labyrinth is available to walkers any time the Gardens are open. However, the Labyrinth will be closed when weather or river conditions indicate safety concerns. == Awards and recognition ==