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“Flower Lady” Sidewalk Biz Re-Blossoms

by LISA REISMAN

With a box of 250 roses and a few hundred other flowers, as well as an assortment of balloons, “flower lady” Annette Walton figured she was well-stocked for her grand reopening in front of Yale’s Humanities Quadrangle on York Street between Wall and Elm.

Around an hour later, those hundreds of flowers were mostly gone.

Walton, who’s been selling flowers since the 1990s around Yale’s downtown campus, re-set up shop on York Street last week after an almost three-year hiatus.

She saw her street-vending license expire during the pandemic when the university went remote starting in March 2020. A hardy band of Yale students and alumni jumped through hoops for her at City Hall and launched a university-wide GoFundMe campaign that raised $1,500 to help her business re-blossom.

The reason for the overwhelming response to the reopening, according to Yale School of Drama alumnus Arthur Nacht, was simple.

“She’s a wonderful person, a special woman,” said Nacht, as he stood on the sidewalk amid a hive of students buzzing around the “Flower Lady” on a pictureperfect Valentine’s Day; he met Walton in 2003 while a student at the drama school.

“Plus she has a million friends.”

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Among them is senior Adam Zhang, who returned with four boxes of 1,000 roses.

“It was really a community effort,” “You’re amazing, Annette,” said senior Katie Smith, a history major, who was standing nearby. She met Walton early on in her time at Yale. They hit it off. Every Wednesday, she, along with her friend Averil Walters, bring her coffee. “We sit on the wall and chat for a couple of hours,” Smith said. “Best part of my day.”

Emme Magliato, who organized the GoFundMe campaign with Zhang, had a similar take.

“I met Annette during my first year and I felt really connected to her,” she said. “I had a hard time connecting on campus at Yale, coming from a lower-income background. I feel like every time I see Annette, it brings joy into my day.”

She watched another student ask for another five roses.

“This is huge for her not just for today but also for the future,” she said. “When we set up the campaign, her husband had just passed away, and we wanted to make sure she felt supported and had community around her to help her get her license and keep her busy and engaged.”

Zhang, who met her in fall 2021, agreed.

“I felt very connected to Annette, and I saw an opportunity to really help some-

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