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JARS v36n3 - Joseph B. Gable Selected as the First Recipient of the Pioneer Achievement Award

Joseph B. Gable Selected as the First Recipient of
the Pioneer Achievement Award

With all our respect and love, we honor Joseph Benson Gable, a great and gentle man, a true pioneer in the Genus Rhododendron by awarding him the Pioneer Achievement Award for:

— his vision and unswerving conviction of the prodigious potential in the Genus for diverse and untapped beauty and uniqueness.
— for the creation of beautiful, novel plants adapted to growing conditions in gardens in the eastern United States, and
throughout the world.
— for his innocent and humble perseverance despite intolerant climate and generally unavailable knowledge.
— for his keen observation and constantly open mind.
— for his infinite patience and dedication to the improvement of the Genus.
— for his accumulation of knowledge heretofore unknown to his part of the world at that time.
— for his meticulously kept records.
— for his selfless sharing of knowledge and plants with others.
— for his understanding and evaluation of the many species, which became his building blocks.
— for his hybrids which in turn became building blocks for scores of plants in an ever wider and more diverse climate.
— for the beauty he created.
— for the many friends he made.

Joe Gable — The Man
This understanding of Joe Gable - The Man comes from excerpts of letters written at the time of his death on July 20, 1972, from an essay written in a school class by his 14 year old granddaughter, and other selected writings.

— "gentle perceptive seeker after all that is beautiful on God's green earth" (From the bulletin of Mr. Gable's Memorial Service)
— "so many happy memories. I remember the dinner (or was it the breakfast?) meeting in Chevy Chase when Joe was
given the Rhododendron Society Gold Medal and when he smiled (or giggled) that he didn't know why he should be
given a medal for doing just what he wanted to do" (John and Gertrude Wister, Swarthmore, PA)
— "to those who knew him, Joseph B. Gable of Stewartstown, Pennsylvania was a slight, shy, gentle man with thinning grey hair, weather beaten and unpretentious in his gardening clothes; not much of a business man, but totally consumed by the desire to create new, better colored strains of azaleas and rhododendrons hardy in the colder parts of the country”"(Edward W. Weingartner - "Gable Azaleas in the Olive W. Lee Memorial Garden" - ARS Quarterly Bulletin)
— "I must say that Joe had a good, long, wonderful life filled with enthusiasm for people, music, flowers, and family. What more did he have to look forward to other than sharing God's kingdom?" (Ernest Yelton, Rutherfordton, N.C.)
— "It has been a privilege to walk with Mr. Gable in his gardens, and catch a bit of his quiet enthusiasm for the new plants." (Elizabeth and Lorenzo Kinney, Kingston, R.I.)
— "he so distinguished himself because he was so dedicated and devoted to his ideal, and that always involves a personal sacrifice and often greater for the family" (David G. Leach, N. Madison, Ohio).
— "he served as an inspiration to others who have continued this work" (Robert L. Ticknor, Aurora, Oregon, President of the American Rhododendron Society)
— "for decades I had depended on him more than anyone else for information about Rhododendrons, and I am proud that our names have become so universally linked." (Guy Nearing, Ramsey, N.J.)
— "In town he is known as a man who helps his neighbors, pays debts, and keeps his word" (Margaret Kantruss — essay written at 14 years.
— "I am thinking that dad was rich in good friends" (Caroline Gable, Oct 6, 1981, Stewartstown, PA)

Joe Gable — The Plantsman
Some notable events as recorded from some of Mr. Gable's letters, and excerpts from his catalogs will document Mr. Gable - The Plantsman.