LaGrange Woman’s Club fundraiser nets thousands for Bellevue

Published 12:00 am Thursday, March 17, 2016

By Tyler H. Jones

tjones@civitasmedia.com

Faye Mock, center, hands a barbecue plate to Valerie Cardwell, right, as Kim Banks watches Wednesday during a LaGrange Woman’s Club fundraiser for the historic Bellevue home on Ben Hill Street.

http://lagrangenews.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/37/2016/03/web1_BellevueBBQ02Web.jpgFaye Mock, center, hands a barbecue plate to Valerie Cardwell, right, as Kim Banks watches Wednesday during a LaGrange Woman’s Club fundraiser for the historic Bellevue home on Ben Hill Street.

Tyler H. Jones | Daily News

Amy Hurston, a member of the LaGrange Woman’s Club, hands a supporter a barbecue plate during a fundraiser Wednesday for the historic Bellevue home on Ben Hill Street.

http://lagrangenews.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/37/2016/03/web1_BellevueBBQ03WEB.jpgAmy Hurston, a member of the LaGrange Woman’s Club, hands a supporter a barbecue plate during a fundraiser Wednesday for the historic Bellevue home on Ben Hill Street.

Tyler H. Jones | Daily News

From left, Judy Bledsoe, Kathren Fogg and Nancy Watson, members of the LaGrange Woman’s Club, prepare barbecue plates during a fundraiser for the historic Bellevue home Wednesday near McClendon Circle.

http://lagrangenews.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/37/2016/03/web1_BellevueBBQ01WEB.jpgFrom left, Judy Bledsoe, Kathren Fogg and Nancy Watson, members of the LaGrange Woman’s Club, prepare barbecue plates during a fundraiser for the historic Bellevue home Wednesday near McClendon Circle.

Tyler H. Jones | Daily News

LaGRANGE — A local civic organization on Wednesday raised thousands of dollars to support an area landmark.

The LaGrange Woman’s Club’s annual barbecue sale raised more than $3,000 that will be donated for the maintenance and upkeep of Bellevue, the historic home of late U.S. Sen. Benjamin Harvey Hill, according to Kathren Fogg, the club’s publicity chair.

“This is our 10th year doing this,” she said. “We have a wonderful partnership with Hog Heaven (barbecue) and they’ve been with us for all 10 years.”

By noon Wednesday, the club sold about 300 plates of barbecue, Fogg said, with the goal of selling a total of 340.

The club meets monthly at Bellevue and is a service organization to which Bellevue was gifted in 1942 after purchase by the Fuller E. Callaway Foundation.

The home, a Greek Revival built about 1854, was added to the National Park Service’s National Register of Historic Places in 1972. The grounds of the home originally covered 1,200 acres and were enclosed by a stone wall and massive gates, replicas of gates at the White House, and said to have cost $12,000, according to National Park Service records.

The gates once stood at the intersection of Ben Hill and Broad streets. Today, parts of the gates sit on the campus of LaGrange College near the chapel.

The LaGrange Woman’s Club’s next outreach event is scheduled for May 12, and will be a fashion show and luncheon at Bellevue, Fogg said.

For more information about the club, call Bellevue at 706-884-1832.

Tyler H. Jones is a reporter with LaGrange Daily News. He may be reached at 706-884-7311, ext. 2155.