(828) 526-0173 | info@thelaurelmagazine.com | Copyright 2025 – All Rights Reserved.
Balentine’s Honored
Written By: Holly Renehan, Southern Highlands Reserve | Issue: March 2025
Betty and Robert Balentine and their Southern Highlands Reserve, custodians of Toxaway’s unique natural heritage, have achieved national recognition for their tireless preservation efforts.

Robert and Betty Balentine
The Garden Club of America has awarded Southern Highlands Reserve founders Betty and Robert Balentine its highest honor for their work to preserve the unique biodiversity of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
The Cynthia Pratt Laughlin Medal, one of 10 national medals awarded annually, recognizes outstanding achievement in environmental protection and maintenance of the quality of life.
The Balentines founded Southern Highlands Reserve (SHR) as a nonprofit in 2002 when they assembled 120 acres of land in western North Carolina and placed it under conservation easement to protect it from development.
Over the last two decades, their vision and commitment have helped SHR become a national leader in conservation. Located at 4,500 feet on top of Toxaway Mountain, the nonprofit includes a 22-acre native plant garden, 100 acres of natural woodlands, and a new state-of-the-art greenhouse that will be the epicenter for native plant propagation in the Southern Appalachian Mountains.
SHR is a founding member of the Southern Appalachian Spruce Restoration Initiative, a partnership of state and federal agencies, nonprofits, and private organizations working to restore the second most endangered ecosystem in the United States, the high elevation spruce-fir forests of the Southern Blue Ridge.
To accommodate increased demand, SHR’s new $2.7 million greenhouse more than doubles the garden’s current propagation capacity.
Betty has been a member of Peachtree Garden Club, Zone VIII, since 1992 and has served as its president. She is also a member and former chair of the board of advisors for the State Botanical Garden of Georgia in Athens. She advocates for the publication of works on the natural world through her participation on the Board of the Cherokee Garden Library.
Robert’s love of nature developed in his youth as an Eagle Scout, camping and hiking in the North Carolina mountains. He was inspired by his father, an avid gardener, and his mother, a member and past president of Peachtree Garden Club, and a horticulture judge for the Garden Club of America. Robert is currently chair of The Garden Conservancy and was founding president of the Southeastern Horticultural Society. He is chairman of Atlanta-based wealth management firm Balentine, where he counsels families on shaping legacies defined by purpose and philanthropy. His book, First Generation Wealth, was published in 2022.