The
Roosevelts named many common areas in Pine Knoll Shores for individuals who worked directly or indirectly for them and played a role in the town's early development. The story of
Garner Park is somewhat different. [i]
Freshly dug canals filled with alligators, three
newly laid roads (Juniper, Willow and Yaupon), the Atlantis Lodge on Highway
58, dense marsh, thick maritime forest, a few houses, and a plan—that is the
core of Pine Knoll Shores not yet incorporated as a town in the late1960s. The
main road is narrow and roughly paved. It starts at Atlantic Beach and ends in
a dirt trail at Salter Path.
Eva and Willard Garner, living in Atlantic Beach
since the 1950’s, decide to build a home here. They select a lot on a new
street, Oakleaf Drive, connecting the three original roads. Next door is land
designated as common area in the Roosevelts’ master plan. That common area,
just east of Juniper Road, originally identified as North East Sound Park,
opens onto a small canal on one side and to Bogue Sound on the other.
Eva and Willard’s sons, Ches and Mike, say their
father purchased a tractor with a bush hog and used it not only to mow his own
property but also to clear other land. “Working with Don Brock and Colonel
McNeil, he cleared common areas for parks, including the one next to our
house,” says Mike. Willard Garner continued to use the bush hog to help
maintain the park next to his property.
Image of tractor with bush hog that may be like the one Willard Garner used.ii
Initially, Pine Knoll Association (PKA), the first
homeowners’ association, governed all common areas. In 1972, Pine Knoll Shores
Corporation (PIKSCO) homeowners’ association incorporated. By 1977, when the
Roosevelt family was finally ready to transfer property rights, PIKSCO had
already assumed responsibility for four of the parks. The deed transfer made
ownership official. PIKSCO received Memorial Park (much later donated to the
town for beach access), Morgan Hammer Park, McNeill Park and Garner Park. PKA
received Ocean Park, Brock Basin, Hall Haven, and Davis Landing. Early on, the
two homeowner associations established a reciprocal relationship so members and
their guests could use all of the parks, the only limitation being leasing of
boat slips.
Interestingly, the renaming of North East Sound
Park occurred before the official deed transfer. December 14, 1976, PIKSCO
Board meeting minutes read: “A motion was made, seconded and passed to name the
sound Park in which the boat Basin is located ‘Willard H. Garner Sound Park,’
in honor of former Board Member Willard Garner, now deceased. The Garner property
abuts the park. Mrs. Garner gave her approval."
The deed transfer in 1977 was acknowledged in a letter to Ted Hearth, a representative of the Roosevelt family from Stone & Webster Management Consultants:
In
a letter dated March 31, 1977, Chairman Lt. Col. Robert P. O'Neal, USMC, Ret.
wrote to Mr. T. F. Hearth:
"The
PIKSCO Corporation Board takes pleasure in acknowledging the grant of park
properties in this subdivision as conveyed in the DEED UPON SPECIAL LIMITATION
from the Roosevelt Estate. [iii]
Garner Park, as it is most commonly called, became
a popular recreational area. Over the years, like other common areas, it has
undergone changes. Alligators are no longer commonly seen in the area. Pumping
water from flooded areas after hurricanes has sometimes caused the Garner Park
canal area to fill with silt, but most changes are positive. In1975, PIKSCO
added a volleyball court still in use today. In 1999, a covered pavilion with
picnic tables and a new pier with benches for sitting out on the sound further
enhanced the park. Close by the pier are racks with multicolored kayaks
attractively and conveniently stacked, and in 2015 new racks were installed.
Today, Garner Park is the perfect place for members
of PIKSCO, PKA, and their guests to have a cookout, shoot some hoops, play
volleyball, throw horseshoes, push a youngster on a swing, launch a kayak or
just sit on the pier and enjoy a summer sunset.
View of Bogue Sound from Garner Park. 2015 Photo by William Flexman.
Post
Author: Phyllis Makuck
[i] An
earlier version of this story appeared in the December 2008 issue of The Shoreline. It was written with the
help of Ches and Mike Garner as well as with the assistance of Linda Cumberland,
who was, at the time, keeper of PIKSCO records.
[ii] http://twentywheels.com/imgs/a/a/q/f/f/kubota_l2250_diesel_tractor_with_bush_hog_2_lgw.jpg
[iii] Letter found in 2008 by Linda Cumberland in old PIKSCO records.
[ii] http://twentywheels.com/imgs/a/a/q/f/f/kubota_l2250_diesel_tractor_with_bush_hog_2_lgw.jpg
[iii] Letter found in 2008 by Linda Cumberland in old PIKSCO records.