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AIS REGION 18
2006
POSTHUMOUS DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD
WELLINGTON F. SCOTT, JR. (1905 – 1997)
Nominated and written by Jim Morris
Of all the posthumous Region 18 members,
Wellington F. Scott, Jr. was the most influential person
in the phenomenal early growth of our region. My article “In Memoriam” from
the October 2003 AIS Bulletin points out many of
the events and activities he was involved in for both our
region and AIS itself.
This belated and retrospective memoriam
resulted from the research we did in honoring past AIS
President Marion R. Walker in an earlier issue. Wellington F. Scott, or “Scotty” as
he was known throughout the iris world, was actively linked
with Marion in the American Iris Society of the 1950s and
1960s, serving with him on the AIS Board of Directors.
Scotty’s interest in irises started as a youngster
in 1914 with his grandmother’s two-acre Lexington,
KY iris garden. He joined the American Iris Society
in 1944 and later became a Life member. A very outgoing
and organized businessman in St. Louis, he was appointed
Region 18 RVP by then AIS President Dr. Franklin Cook, serving
from 1949-1952. Scotty was Publicity Chairman for the
1952 AIS Convention held at the Chase Hotel in St. Louis,
and his garden in Ferguson on Sassafras Lane, named for a
very old sassafras tree at the entrance, was on tour.
Scotty was a prolific writer and
photographer and served the Photography Society of America
as Convention Program Director. In Region 18 he was a dynamic man of action,
continuing the region’s number one membership position
in AIS; proposing the region’s Symposium of
100 Best Iris Under One Dollar; sponsoring new affiliate
growth; putting the Regional Newsletter on a subscription
basis; helping with the formation of Region 21 as Iowa
and Nebraska were split out of Region 18 because of 18’s
rapid growth; and championing a young man, Cliff Benson,
first as Region 18 Secretary-Treasurer and then as AIS Executive
Secretary.
First serving as Chairman of the
AIS Membership Committee (51-55), he also chaired the Board
of Counselors (RVPs), was an AIS Director (51-55), AIS
2nd VP (53-55), and AIS 1st VP (56-58). Scotty was active at a time in AIS’s
history when it became the World Authority on all irises
other than the bulbous section. Mr. Harold Knowlton
and Dr. George H. M. Lawrence worked toward an agreement
on Registration and nomenclature whereby the new 1959 Check
List of AIS would meet all requirements of this new responsibility. Dr.
Lawrence was the American representative on the International
Horticultural Council and Mr. Knowlton was the Editor of
the Check List.
Dr. Fitz Randolph and Dr. Lawrence
prepared a new classification of bearded irises which the
Board approved in November 1957. Since
registration and classification were worked out, next were
awards. The Median Iris Society and the Aril Society
International had set up special committees to study the
development of an Awards System within their own Societies
for the promotion of their special interests. Such
a separate system already existed in the Dwarf Iris Society. This
posed the question to President Walker, “Is AIS to
be the World Authority or are we going to break into several
special interest groups and have no real authority?”
MIS, DIS, and ASI were agreeable
to keeping the entire iris family under one roof and united. Jay Ackerman presented
several amendments to be made to the rules of the Awards
Committee. These changes were adopted by unanimous
vote of the ten Board members present. Recognizing
that the main interest of a large majority of the AIS membership
of the time and probably for all time was in the tall bearded
iris, there was also a good percentage of the membership
with interest in other types of irises. The new award
rules changed from 10 total High Commendation votes (all
classes) to 10 HC votes for TBs and 5 HC votes in each of
the other classes. Sounds simple enough today.
But when the Board passed this on
November 13, 1957, Scott, the Awards Chairman, was not
in attendance. Therein
lies the rub. Having substantial means, he was in New
Zealand serving as the Board’s Official representative
at the Annual Meeting of the New Zealand Iris Society. Upon
Scott’s return he took basic disagreement with the
Board and resigned his offices in AIS.
As a Life member, retired at a young
age, and with the aforementioned means, he continued to
visit an incredible number of gardens, write about and
photograph irises and help his region, which at the time
consisted of one-third of the total AIS membership. A
review of AIS Bulletins and Region 18 Bulletins reveals
numerous visits to the gardens of Mary Williamson, Paul Cook,
Orville Fay, Dave Hall, Georgia Hinkle, Cliff Benson, Dorothy
Palmer, Ada Buxton, Joe Becherer, Gene Wild, Don Waters,
James Marsh, Brother Charles, Wilma Greenlee, Helen McCaughey,
John Ohl, Helen Reynolds, Rev. David Kinish, Bonabeth Brickell,
Carl Schirmer, Bob Minnick, Geddes Douglas, Chet Thompkins,
Schreiners, Cooleys, and the Sasses. Overseas his visits
included Australia, New Zealand, Germany, England, France,
Italy, Hawaii, Tokyo, Manila, Hong Kong, Saigon, Bangkok,
Singapore, Auckland and Fiji.
As an outgoing and decisive person
Scotty could be very charming, as when he arranged for
commissioning of visiting New Zealander Molly Emms as a
Kentucky Colonel; you
see, when he was a student at the U. of Kentucky the
football coach was “Happy” Chandler who later
became Kentucky Governor; or when he negotiated for
free office space at the Missouri Botanical Gardens for the
AIS headquarters. But he had an edge about him too.
His letters in 1970 (age 65) to AIS President William T.
Bledsoe and AIS Bulletin Editor J. Arthur Nelson
were often biting indictments. In one he stated that, “If
I were not a Life Member, I would surely resign!” Instead,
he faded away. I was unable to find any further information
on Scotty for 27 years from 1970 until his death in 1997
at age 92.
What a colorful person!
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