MG Educational Gardens
Galleries


Help us meet our
challenge grant,
DONATE NOW!

Comments or Questions: director@greenbankfarm.com
765 Wonn Road
Suite #A201
Greenbank, WA  98253
(360) 678-7700






"And best, though not least of all, there are five thousand enthusiastic persons who are of the opinion that, after all, the garden of Eden never was permanently established on the east bank of the Mediterranean . but right here on Whidbey Island, and preferably at Greenbank."
The Westerner Magazine, November 1913
 

In the early 1900s, the Calvin Philips family began experimenting to see what the land on Whidbey Island would grow. In the 1930s, the Philips switched from dairy farming to berry farming; by 1972 the Greenbank Berry Farm was known as the largest loganberry farm in the United States. Chateau Ste. Michelle purchased the property and opened a retail shop at the historic farm but shocked the local community in 1995 with sale and development plans for a 700-home self-contained community. Greenbank residents rallied to save the farm!

The goal was to preserve this landmark as a living-history farm, scenic recreation site, and cultural community center. The national non-profit Trust for Public Land negotiated with Chateau Ste. Michelle to sell all 522 acres of the Greenbank Farm to Island County, the Port of Coupeville and The Nature Conservancy for $2.8 million. On September 15, 1997, the community turned out to celebrate.

The Greenbank Farm Management Group formed as a nonprofit Board of Directors comprised of Whidbey Island residents who meet regularly to ensure that the farm serves its owners - the residents of Island County. Today, the farm operates a Wine Shop specializing in local and regional foods and wines, featuring the Whidbey Island Greenbank Farm private label Loganberry Wine and specialty products. In addition, the farm hosts community events, receptions, meetings, classes, workshops, the annual Loganberry Festival in July and the year round markets featuring local produce, crafts, art, plants and food. Organic farming methods are bringing the fields back to production and the outlook is favorable for this island treasure.

 
What is a loganberry?

In August of 1881, Judge J. H. Logan planted seeds in his garden near Santa Cruz, California, in an attempt to get a better blackberry. He planted two varieties of blackberry (the Aughinbaugh and the Texas Early) and happened to place them alongside an old variety of red raspberry (name unknown but resembling the Red Antwerp). An unusual hybrid resulted: a plant very similar to the Aughinbaugh parent but very much larger and of stronger growth: the Loganberry. The first fruit of this unintentional cross between a blackberry and a raspberry was tasted on May 31, 1883. For more history, click here.
 
"Loganberry! Child of the raspberry and the blackberry . long may you produce on Whidbey Island . berry good!"
Whidbey News-Times, 1987