Lynch's Garden Center To Change Name By End Of 2017 - 27 East

Residence

Residence / 1366840

Lynch’s Garden Center To Change Name By End Of 2017

icon 1 Photo
Margaret “Midge” Fowler; owner of Lynch's Garden Center in Southampton Village, said she will be gradually changing the name of the business to represent her family's name. AMANDA BERNOCCO

Margaret “Midge” Fowler; owner of Lynch's Garden Center in Southampton Village, said she will be gradually changing the name of the business to represent her family's name. AMANDA BERNOCCO

author on Apr 13, 2017

Ever since taking over the shop in early 2015, the new owners of Lynch’s Garden Center in Southampton Village have been planting the seed in their employees’ minds that they will be changing the business’s well-known name—and by the end of this year, customers will begin to notice the transition too. Margaret “Midge” Fowler, who runs the garden center with her two sons, Ricky and Andy, said in a recent interview that the business will slowly transition to being called Fowler’s Garden Center. She explained that when she purchased the shop from the Lynch family, who owned the business for 80 years, the name change was included in the agreement. The Fowlers would keep Lynch’s name for three years, before phasing it out and taking a new name.

“We wanted the name-brand recognition for a few years, but we did agree that after three years that would be it,” Ms. Fowler said. “Just little by little, we are changing it.”

Employees, who were all retained when the business changed hands, immediately started seeing the new name on their paychecks, Ms. Fowler pointed out. She also changed the incorporation documents early on and started billing vendors under the new name.

“Our employees know it, so now it’s time to let the world know it,” Ms. Fowler said.

This spring the Fowlers plan to start rolling out delivery trucks with the new logo on it, which will be green and feature a wheelbarrow. Once the busy season starts winding down—typically somewhere around Independence Day in July—the Fowlers will work on securing new village permits to change the sign. Ms. Fowler said she doesn’t expect that process to be completed until the end of the year.

The shift in ownership at the garden center went smoothly, said Ms. Fowler, noting that the business has been blooming with customers. Locals start buying plants as soon as there are a few consecutive warm days in the spring, she said. “As soon as weather breaks and feels good, we will be nuts until the Fourth of July.”

Though her business is changing its name, Ms. Fowler said she understands that to some people in the village it will always be referred to as Lynch’s.

“As long as customer service is where it needs to be, that’s all that matters,” she said. “There are some people who still don’t know it was sold.”

Lynch’s was started in the early 1900s by Terence Lynch as an estate management business and expanded to include a storefront on Nugent Street. In 1955, the business moved to its current location on North Sea Road, where it grew into the garden center it is today.

You May Also Like:

Spring Is the Time To Pot Up Houseplants

In spring our gardening attention logically and naturally focuses on things going on outside. We ... 25 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

The April Ramble

April got off to a typical start. For most of the first two weeks of ... 18 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

AIA Peconic Presents 2024 Design Awards

AIA Peconic, the East End’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects, recognized outstanding design, ... 15 Apr 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

A Complicated Task – The Renovation and Addition to Temple Adas Israel

For any architect, the renovation and addition to a temple like Adas Israel would be ... by Anne Surchin, R.A.

Plant Radishes Now

As you may have discovered from last week’s column there is more to a radish ... 11 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

In Praise of Trees

“The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time ... 9 Apr 2024 by Marissa Bridge

PSEG Reminds Customers To Call 811 Before Digging

As National Safe Digging Month begins, PSEG Long Island reminds customers, contractors and excavators that the law requires them to call 811 before digging to ensure underground pipelines, conduits, wires and cables are properly marked out. Striking an underground electrical line can cause serious injury and outages, resulting in repair costs and fines, PSEG stated in an announcement this week. Every digging project, even a small project like planting a tree or building a deck, requires a call to 811. The call is free and the mark-out service is free. The call must be made whether the job is being ... by Staff Writer

Capturing the Artistry of Landscape Architecture

Pink and white petals are unfolding from their fuzzy bud scales, hyacinths scent the air ... by Kelly Ann Smith

AIA Peconic To Hold Design Awards Celebration April 13 in East Hampton

AIA Peconic, the East End’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects, will hold its 2024 Daniel J. Rowen Memorial Design Awards celebration on Saturday, April 13, at 6 p.m. at the Ross School Senior Lecture Hall in East Hampton. The work submitted to the Design Awards will be on gallery display. The jurors included Deborah Burke, Joeb Moore and Omar Gandhi, and the special jury adjudicating the Sustainable Architecture Award: Anthony Harrington, Whitney Smith and Rives Taylor. The awards presentation will include remarks by AIA Peconic President Edgar Papazian and a program moderated by past AIA Peconic President Lori ... 4 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

A Brief History of Radishes

The madness will begin. Adventurous souls have had just one day too many of cabinus ... by Andrew Messinger