Ida Jane Cason (1872-1936)

Conservator of Ferrell Gardens; wife of textile manufacturer, Fuller Earle Callaway (1870-1928); daughter of Alexander Toombs Cason (1845-1918) and Olivia Pratt Jewell (1849-1921) and sister to Edward Ashley Cason (1870-1897).

Ferrell Gardens
First laid out in 1832 as the formal garden at the home of Mickleberry Ferrll (1787-1861) and his wife, Nancy Coleman (1799-1888), "Ferrell Gardens" was expanded in 1841 by the Ferrell's daughter, Sarah Coleman Ferrell (1817-1903) and her husband, a first cousin, Judge and Georgia State Senator, Blount Coleman Ferrell (1816-1908). The two and one-half acre Italian Renaissance and Baroque gardens, then known then as "The Terraces" was purchased in 1912 by Mrs. Callaway and her husband, as the center piece of their three-thousand acre estate "Hills and Dales." Enlarged to five acres under the care of Mr. and Mrs. Callaway, the gardens, thirty-five acres of land and massive Italian styled villa designed by Atlanta architect J. Neel Reid, built by Mr. and Mrs. Callaway, survive today as the foremost example of southern history in southwest Georgia. Originally buried at Hill View Cemetery, Mrs. Callaway was re-interred in the Callaway Family Cemetery, Troup County, Georgia on the grounds of "Hills and Dales" in La Grange.