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New York Botanical Garden

The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) is a botanical garden at Bronx Park in the Bronx, New York City. Established in 1891, it is located on a 250-acre (100 ha) site that contains a landscape with over one million living plants; the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, a greenhouse containing several habitats; and the LuEsther T. Mertz Library, which contains one of the world's largest collections of botany-related texts. As of 2016, over a million people visit the New York Botanical Garden annually.

New York Botanical Garden
Visitor Center in June 2012
Established1891
LocationThe Bronx, New York City
Public transit accessMetro-North Railroad: Botanical Garden
New York City Subway: Pelham Parkway
New York City Bus: Bx12, Bx12 SBS, Bx19, Bx22, Bx26
Websitewww.nybg.org
New York Botanical Garden
LocationSouthern and Bedford Park Boulevards
Bronx, New York 10458
Coordinates40°51′49″N 73°52′42″W / 40.86361°N 73.87833°W / 40.86361; -73.87833
Area250 acres (100 ha)
Built1891
ArchitectLord & Burnham Co.
Architectural styleVictorian era
NRHP reference No.67000009
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 28, 1967[1]
Designated NHLMay 28, 1967[2]

NYBG is also a major educational institution, teaching visitors about plant science, ecology, and healthful eating through NYBG's interactive programming. Nearly 90,000 of the annual visitors are children from underserved neighboring communities. An additional 3,000 are teachers from New York City's public school system participating in professional development programs that train them to teach science courses at all grade levels. NYBG operates one of the world's largest plant research and conservation programs.

NYBG was established in 1891 and the first structures on the grounds opened at the end of that decade. Since 1967, the garden has been listed as a National Historic Landmark, and several buildings have been designated as official New York City landmarks.

Mission statement edit

The New York Botanical Garden is an advocate for the plant world. The Garden pursues its mission through its role as a museum of living plant collections arranged in gardens and landscapes across its National Historic Landmark site; through its comprehensive education programs in horticulture and plant science; and through the wide-ranging research programs of the International Plant Science Center.[3]

History edit

Context edit

As early as 1877, ideas had been circulating in New York City to create a botanical garden; funding could not be obtained at the time, although the efforts led to parkland being set aside for future use.[4] By 1888, the Torrey Botanical Society was promoting the construction of a large botanical garden in New York City. The Garden's creation followed a fund-raising campaign led by the Torrey Botanical Society and Columbia University botanist Nathaniel Lord Britton and his wife Elizabeth Gertrude Britton, who were inspired to emulate the Royal Botanic Gardens in London.[5]: 2 

In 1889, the Torrey Botanical Society's members decided to build the botanical garden at Bronx Park in the center of the Bronx, New York City's northernmost borough.[5]: 2  The Lorillard family owned most of the land at that location.[6]: 147  The city had already been given authorization to acquire the land as part of the 1884 New Parks Act, which was intended to preserve lands that would soon become part of New York City.[6]: 166 [7][8][9] Some 640 acres (2.6 km2) of land surrounding the Lorillard estate was acquired by the City of New York as part of Bronx Park in 1888–1889.[6]: 147 

Establishment edit

By act of the New York State Legislature, the New York Botanical Garden was established on April 28, 1891.[10] The garden occupied part of the grounds of the Lorillard estate and a parcel that was formerly the easternmost portion of the campus of St. John's College (now Fordham University);[6]: 147  the latter included three graves of the Fordham University Cemetery, which were then relocated.[11] The stated purpose of the act was:

... for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a botanical garden and museum and arboretum therein, for the collection of and culture of plants, flowers, shrubs and trees, the advancement of botanical science and knowledge, and the prosecution of original researches therein and in kindred subjects, for affording instruction in the same, for the prosecution and exhibition of ornamental and decorative horticulture and gardening, and for the entertainment, recreation and instruction of the people.[4][5]: 2 [10]

As per the acts of incorporation, a board of directors would manage the NYBG. The board of directors included Columbia College's president and professors of biology, chemistry, and geology; the presidents of the Torrey Society, New York City Board of Education, and the Department of Public Parks' board of commissioners; the Mayor of New York City; and nine other members elected to the board.[5]: 2 [10] The legislation would provide 250 acres (100 ha) within Bronx Park to the NYBG, and enable the board of directors to construct a library and conservatory, if at least $250,000 was raised within five years. If this condition were reached, the city would then issue $0.5 million in bonds.[5]: 2 [10] The principal officers of the new corporation set up for the garden were Cornelius Vanderbilt II, Andrew Carnegie and J.P. Morgan, with Nathaniel Lord Britton as the new secretary.[4]

Prominent civic leaders and financiers, including Vanderbilt, Carnegie, and Morgan, agreed to match the City's commitment to finance the buildings and improvements.[5]: 2  By May 1895, the $250,000 in bonds had been raised[12] but the plans had not been fully confirmed.[13] The Board of Directors then asked landscape architect Calvert Vaux and his partner, Parks Superintendent Samuel Parsons Jr., to consult on site selection. The north end of Bronx Park was decided as the best location for the NYBG.[14] By August 1895, the architects had started a survey on the site. Because the Bronx River and various small tributaries ran through the park, drainage was a major consideration.[15] Though Vaux's preliminary layout was approved in October 1895, he died the following month.[5]: 3  The topographical survey was completed in March 1896.[16] The master plan was created by a team that included Britton & Parsons, as well as landscape engineer John R. Brinley, landscape gardener Samuel Henshaw, botanist Lucien Marcus Underwood, and architects Robert W. Gibson and Lincoln Pierson (the latter from the firm Lord & Burnham).[5]: 3 

The LuEsther T. Mertz Library and Enid A. Haupt Conservatory were among the first structures at the NYBG to open. The Library was built between 1897 and 1900,[5]: 4  and the Conservatory was built around the same time, being completed in 1902.[17]

1900s to 1980s edit

For over a century after its opening, the NYBG refused to charge admission.[18] Because of this, as well as insufficient government and private funding, its budget deficit started to increase in the 1950s.[19] After the city cut the NYBG's budget in 1970, the garden was forced to remain closed for 3 to 4 days a week, and officials worried that this could eventually lead to permanent closure.[20] In 1974, for the first time in the botanical garden's history, officials had to annually petition New York State Legislature for funds. That year, the NYBG announced a major renovation to the conservatory and the addition of a building dedicated to displaying plants in different habitats.[19] The next year, budget cuts related to the 1975 New York City fiscal crisis resulted in the NYBG being closed on weekdays for the first time in its history.[21]

In 1988, the NYBG announced a renovation of its museum building, including the addition of a new annex, which was supposed to open in 1991.[22] By the early 1990s, the NYBG facilities were neglected. The garden did not have enough space in its parking lots to accommodate all its visitors, turning away potential guests. Many areas were neglected, except for the 40 acres (16 ha) surrounding the conservatory, and a wetland had even been created unintentionally due to a broken sewer.[23] A controversy arose in 1994 when the adjacent Fordham University proposed building a 480-foot-tall (150 m) radio tower for its radio station WFUV directly across from the Haupt Conservatory.[24] The dispute continued until 2002, after several years of failed resolutions, when Montefiore Medical Center offered to move WFUV's antenna to its own facilities.[25]

1990s to present edit

By the mid-1990s, additions to the NYBG were being undertaken to reverse years of neglect.[23] In 1994 the formerly free garden started charging an admission fee to fund these improvements as well as the continued maintenance of existing facilities.[18] The Everett Children's Garden opened in mid-1998.[26] By 2000, the NYBG had requested $300 million for renovations, including a new gift shop and renovation of the greenhouses and roads.[27] A new visitor center and gift shop were announced the following year, which would replace temporary facilities built in 1990.[28] The new main entrance, with a gift shop, bookstore, plaza, restrooms, cafe, and information kiosks, was completed in 2004 at a cost of $21 million.[29] Meanwhile, the addition of the library annex was delayed to 1994,[30] then to 2000.[31] Construction on the annex started in 1998[32] and it opened in 2002 as the International Plant Science Center.[33]

In 2000, the NYBG began raising money for a $300 million renovation campaign after the city government donated $22 million.[34] The NYBG's International Plant Science Center reopened in 2002 following a renovation.[35][36] Several other projects were completed and programs implemented in the 2000s. In 2004, the Leon Levy Visitor Center opened as the Botanical Garden's main entrance. It included the NYBG Shop and the Pine Tree Café.[37] The following year, the Nolen Greenhouses for Living Collections opened with its publicly accessible Bourke-Sullivan Display House.[38] The Plant Research Laboratory was completed in early 2005[39] and opened the next year at a cost of $23 million.[40][41] In addition to restoring or redesigning existing gardens and collections, such as the Ladies' Border (2002),[42] the Benenson Ornamental Conifers (2004),[43] the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden (2007),[44] the Thain Family Forest (2011),[45] and the Marjorie G. Rosen Seasonal Walk by Piet Oudolf (2014),[46] the New York Botanical Garden added new gardens and collections to its grounds: the Home Gardening Center (2005),[47] the Maureen K. Chilton Azalea Garden (2011) by landscape architect Shavaun Towers of Towers|Golde LLC,[48] and Native Plant Garden (2013), by landscape architect Sheila Brady of Oehme, van Sweden.[49]

Off-site, the institution opened The New York Botanical Garden Midtown Education Center in Manhattan in 2010.[50] NYBG added a parking garage, the Peter J. Sharp Building, nearby in 2012, along with a Bedford Gate entrance to the Garden.[51] NYBG restored its Lorillard Snuff Mill in 2010 and it was named the Lillian and Amy Goldman Stone Mill.[52] NYBG's Humanities Research Institute, supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, was created in 2014 to stimulate public discourse about humankind's relationship with nature and the environment.[53] NYBG opened an on-site restaurant, the Hudson Garden Grill, in 2015.[54] It redesigned and reopened its East Gate entrance in 2017.[55] The Edible Academy, an educational facility for teaching children, families, educators, and the general public about vegetable gardening, nutrition awareness, and environmental stewardship, opened in 2018.[56] In February 2020, NYBG announced that it was partnering with Douglaston Development to create affordable apartments on the northwest edge of the garden. [57]

Grounds edit

 
The Stone Mill, within NYBG

The Garden contains 50 different gardens and plant collections. There is a serene cascade waterfall, as well as wetlands and a 50-acre (20 ha) tract of original, never-logged, old-growth New York forest.[58]

Garden highlights include the 1890s-vintage Haupt Conservatory, designed by Lord & Burnham; the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden, originally laid out by Beatrix Jones Farrand in 1916; an alpine rock garden, designed and installed by Thomas H. Everett in the 1930s;[59] an Herb Garden, designed by Penelope Hobhouse;[60] and a 37-acre (15 ha) conifer collection. The NYBG's extensive research facilities include a propagation center, 550,000-volume research library,[61] and an herbarium of 7.2 to 7.8 million botanical specimens dating back more than three centuries, among the largest in the world.[62][63]

Specialty gardens and collections edit

At the heart of the Garden is the Thain Family Forest,[64] an old-growth forest. It is the largest existing remnant of the original forest which covered all of New York City before the arrival of European settlers in the 17th century. The forest, which was never logged, contains oaks, American beeches, cherry, birch, tulip and white ash trees, some more than two centuries old.[45][65]

The forest itself is split by the Bronx River, the only freshwater river in New York City, and this stretch of the river includes a riverine canyon and rapids.[58] Along the shores sits the Stone Mill, previously known as the Lorillard Snuff Mill, built in 1840.[66] Sculptor Charles Tefft created the Fountain of Life on the grounds in 1905.[5]: 9 

The Ladies' Border, originally commissioned by the Women's Auxiliary Committee in the 1920s,[67] was designed by Ellen Shipman[68] and installed between 1931 and 1933. It consists of a sheltered area measuring 30 by 300 feet (9.1 by 91.4 m) across, near the Haupt Conservatory.[69] In 2000, designer Lynden B. Miller created a new plan for the Ladies' Border.[69][70] The Jane Watson Irwin Perennial Garden was designed in the 1970s by Dan Kiley and redefined by Miller in the 1980s and again in 2003.[71]

Structures edit

Research laboratories edit

 
The Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden

The Pfizer Plant Research Laboratory, named for Pfizer, is a two-story. 28,000-square-foot (2,600 m2) research building that opened in 2006.[40][41] The laboratory studies plant genomics, molecular systematics, plant use in New York City's immigrant communities , and the processes through which plants create neurotoxins.[41] The building has nine labs, one of which is a lab with robotic workstations on the second floor.[40] Genomic DNA from many different species is extracted to create a library of the DNA of the world's plants. This collection is stored in a DNA storage room with 20 freezers housing millions of specimens, including rare, endangered or extinct species.

LuEsther T. Mertz Library edit

 
LuEsther T. Mertz Library

Founded in 1899 and named after supporter LuEsther Mertz,[61] the LuEsther T. Mertz Library is located in the northern section of the NYBG.[58] A 2002 New York Times article mentioned that the library had 775,000 items and 6.5 million plant specimens in its collection,[33] while a book published in 2014 by the NYBG mentioned that the library had "550,000 physical volumes and 1,800 journal titles".[61] As of 2016 the Mertz Library still contained one of the world's largest collections of botany-related texts.[72][73] The library is housed in what was formerly known as the NYBG's Museum Building or Administration Building, which started construction in 1897[74] and was completed in 1900.[75] The structure was designed by Robert W. Gibson[76] in the Renaissance Revival style.[5]: 1 

Enid A. Haupt Conservatory edit

 
The Haupt Conservatory in fall

The Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, named after Enid A. Haupt, is a greenhouse near the western end of the NYBG.[58] The conservatory was designed by the major greenhouse company of the late 1890s, Lord and Burnham Co. The design was modeled after the Palm House at the Royal Botanic Garden and Joseph Paxton's Crystal Palace in Italian Renaissance style.[77] Groundbreaking took place on January 3, 1899, and the conservatory was completed in 1902 at a cost of $177,000.[77] The building was constructed by John R. Sheehan under contract for the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.[78] Since the original construction, major renovations took place in 1935, 1950, 1978, and 1993.[77]

The conservatory houses numerous tropical plants and flowers, cacti and other desert plants, and rainforest vegetation. In summer months, the two pools adjacent to the conservatory display many varieties of lotuses and water lilies.[79]

William & Lynda Steere Herbarium edit

The William & Lynda Steere Herbarium, in the International Plant Science Center behind the library,[58] is one of the largest herbaria in the world, with approximately 7.2 million[62] to 7.8 million specimens.[63][80] after the French National Museum of Natural History in Paris. Founded in 1891, the herbarium quickly became a repository for many important collections. In 1895 the garden incorporated the herbarium of Columbia College, an acquisition of approximately 600,000 specimens, including the private herbaria of John Torrey and C. F. Meisner. In 1945 the garden incorporated the herbaria of the Columbia College of Pharmacy and Princeton University.[81] The herbarium is named after William Steere (son of William C. Steere) and his wife Lynda, who endowed the herbarium in 2002.[63][82]

The Index Herbariorum code assigned to this botanic garden is NY[83] and it is used when citing housed specimens.

Programs edit

In 2008, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation granted the NYBG $572,000 to begin a project called TreeBOL, the Tree Barcode of Life.[84] By sampling the DNA from as many as 100,000 different species of trees from around the world, TreeBOL will document the diversity of plant life, and advance the process of plant DNA barcoding.[85]

A staff of 200 trains 42 doctoral students at a time. Since the 1890s, scientists from the NYBG have mounted about 2,000 exploratory missions worldwide to collect plants in the wild.

School of Professional Horticulture edit

In 1932, Thomas H. Everett expanded an existing training program into a robust curriculum for developing professional horticulturists. [86] Patterned after diploma programs at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, the School for Gardeners combined academic studies with hands-on practical experience in a two-year, full-time program. With the exception of a hiatus during and after the Second World War, the School has trained students since then. Now called the School of Professional Horticulture, this fully-accredited program[87] continues to develop horticulturists of the highest caliber for positions in both public and private gardens.[88] After successfully completing the program, students receive The New York Botanical Garden's Diploma in Horticulture.

Exhibitions edit

The New York Botanical Garden has mounted public exhibitions throughout its history. In 1992, NYBG began presenting what would eventually be called the Holiday Train Show, an annual exhibition of model trains running through a display of New York landmarks made of natural materials.[89] In 2002, it introduced The Orchid Show, an annual exhibition of orchid displays and designed installations with changing themes.[90] Beginning in 2007, the Garden added an annual fall exhibition of kiku, Japanese chrysanthemums trained to grow in modern and ancient forms.[91]

The New York Botanical Garden has also presented large-scale, stand-alone exhibitions, including: Sculpture from the Museum of Modern Art at The New York Botanical Garden (2002),[92] Chihuly at The New York Botanical Garden (2006),[93] Darwin's Garden: An Evolutionary Adventure (2008),[94] Moore in America: Monumental Sculpture at The New York Botanical Garden (2008–2009),[95] Emily Dickinson's Garden: The Poetry of Flowers (2010),[96] Spanish Paradise: Gardens of the Alhambra (2011),[97] Monet's Garden (2012),[98] Manolo Valdés: Monumental Sculpture (2012),[99] Frida Kahlo: Art, Garden, Life (2015),[100] Impressionism: American Gardens on Canvas (2016),[101] CHIHULY (2017),[102] Georgia O'Keeffe: Visions of Hawai'i (2018),[103] Brazilian Modern: The Living Art of Roberto Burle Marx (2019),[104] KUSAMA: Cosmic Nature (2021),[105] and …things come to thrive…in the shedding…in the molting… by Ebony Patterson.[106][107]

Executive leadership edit

Publications edit

The NYBG published The Garden Journal (ISSN 0016-4585) from 1977 to 1990 and from 1931 has produced the scientific journal, Brittonia.[119]

Landmark status edit

The New York Botanical Garden was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1967.[2][120][121] In addition, three structures are designated as individual New York City landmarks: the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory (designated in 1973),[17]: 1  the LuEsther T. Mertz Library (2009),[5]: 1  and the Lorillard Snuff Mill (1966,[66] also separately on the National Register of Historic Places).[122]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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  2. ^ a b . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. September 17, 2007. Archived from the original on November 13, 2013.
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Sources edit

  • Lederman, L.; Forrest, T.; Long, G. (2012). Magnificent Trees of the New York Botanical Garden. Monacelli Press. ISBN 978-1-58093-333-9.
  • Long, G.; Forrest, T.A. (2016). The New York Botanical Garden: Revised and Updated Edition. Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 978-1-4197-1975-2.

External links edit

  • Official website
    • Plant Talk: Inside The New York Botanical Garden blog
  • New York Botanical Garden collected news and commentary at The New York Times
  • Brittonia at HathiTrust Digital Library
  • Brittonia at SCImago Journal Rank
  • Brittonia at Botanical Scientific Journals
  • "The New York Botanical Garden: The Steere Herbarium". YouTube. July 11, 2013. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021.
  • "The New York Botanical Garden: Mertz Library Tour". YouTube. July 11, 2013. Archived from the original on November 17, 2021.

york, botanical, garden, garden, journal, redirects, here, magazine, published, british, royal, horticultural, society, garden, journal, nybg, botanical, garden, bronx, park, bronx, york, city, established, 1891, located, acre, site, that, contains, landscape,. The Garden Journal redirects here For the magazine published by the British Royal Horticultural Society see The Garden journal The New York Botanical Garden NYBG is a botanical garden at Bronx Park in the Bronx New York City Established in 1891 it is located on a 250 acre 100 ha site that contains a landscape with over one million living plants the Enid A Haupt Conservatory a greenhouse containing several habitats and the LuEsther T Mertz Library which contains one of the world s largest collections of botany related texts As of 2016 update over a million people visit the New York Botanical Garden annually New York Botanical GardenVisitor Center in June 2012Established1891LocationThe Bronx New York CityPublic transit accessMetro North Railroad Harlem Line Botanical GardenNew York City Subway Pelham ParkwayNew York City Bus Bx12 Bx12 SBS Bx19 Bx22 Bx26Websitewww wbr nybg wbr orgNew York Botanical GardenU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkEnid A Haupt ConservatoryLocationSouthern and Bedford Park BoulevardsBronx New York 10458Coordinates40 51 49 N 73 52 42 W 40 86361 N 73 87833 W 40 86361 73 87833Area250 acres 100 ha Built1891ArchitectLord amp Burnham Co Architectural styleVictorian eraNRHP reference No 67000009Significant datesAdded to NRHPMay 28 1967 1 Designated NHLMay 28 1967 2 NYBG is also a major educational institution teaching visitors about plant science ecology and healthful eating through NYBG s interactive programming Nearly 90 000 of the annual visitors are children from underserved neighboring communities An additional 3 000 are teachers from New York City s public school system participating in professional development programs that train them to teach science courses at all grade levels NYBG operates one of the world s largest plant research and conservation programs NYBG was established in 1891 and the first structures on the grounds opened at the end of that decade Since 1967 the garden has been listed as a National Historic Landmark and several buildings have been designated as official New York City landmarks Contents 1 Mission statement 2 History 2 1 Context 2 2 Establishment 2 3 1900s to 1980s 2 4 1990s to present 3 Grounds 3 1 Specialty gardens and collections 3 2 Structures 3 2 1 Research laboratories 3 2 2 LuEsther T Mertz Library 3 2 3 Enid A Haupt Conservatory 3 3 William amp Lynda Steere Herbarium 4 Programs 4 1 School of Professional Horticulture 5 Exhibitions 6 Executive leadership 7 Publications 8 Landmark status 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksMission statement editThe New York Botanical Garden is an advocate for the plant world The Garden pursues its mission through its role as a museum of living plant collections arranged in gardens and landscapes across its National Historic Landmark site through its comprehensive education programs in horticulture and plant science and through the wide ranging research programs of the International Plant Science Center 3 History editContext edit As early as 1877 ideas had been circulating in New York City to create a botanical garden funding could not be obtained at the time although the efforts led to parkland being set aside for future use 4 By 1888 the Torrey Botanical Society was promoting the construction of a large botanical garden in New York City The Garden s creation followed a fund raising campaign led by the Torrey Botanical Society and Columbia University botanist Nathaniel Lord Britton and his wife Elizabeth Gertrude Britton who were inspired to emulate the Royal Botanic Gardens in London 5 2 In 1889 the Torrey Botanical Society s members decided to build the botanical garden at Bronx Park in the center of the Bronx New York City s northernmost borough 5 2 The Lorillard family owned most of the land at that location 6 147 The city had already been given authorization to acquire the land as part of the 1884 New Parks Act which was intended to preserve lands that would soon become part of New York City 6 166 7 8 9 Some 640 acres 2 6 km2 of land surrounding the Lorillard estate was acquired by the City of New York as part of Bronx Park in 1888 1889 6 147 Establishment edit By act of the New York State Legislature the New York Botanical Garden was established on April 28 1891 10 The garden occupied part of the grounds of the Lorillard estate and a parcel that was formerly the easternmost portion of the campus of St John s College now Fordham University 6 147 the latter included three graves of the Fordham University Cemetery which were then relocated 11 The stated purpose of the act was for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a botanical garden and museum and arboretum therein for the collection of and culture of plants flowers shrubs and trees the advancement of botanical science and knowledge and the prosecution of original researches therein and in kindred subjects for affording instruction in the same for the prosecution and exhibition of ornamental and decorative horticulture and gardening and for the entertainment recreation and instruction of the people 4 5 2 10 As per the acts of incorporation a board of directors would manage the NYBG The board of directors included Columbia College s president and professors of biology chemistry and geology the presidents of the Torrey Society New York City Board of Education and the Department of Public Parks board of commissioners the Mayor of New York City and nine other members elected to the board 5 2 10 The legislation would provide 250 acres 100 ha within Bronx Park to the NYBG and enable the board of directors to construct a library and conservatory if at least 250 000 was raised within five years If this condition were reached the city would then issue 0 5 million in bonds 5 2 10 The principal officers of the new corporation set up for the garden were Cornelius Vanderbilt II Andrew Carnegie and J P Morgan with Nathaniel Lord Britton as the new secretary 4 Prominent civic leaders and financiers including Vanderbilt Carnegie and Morgan agreed to match the City s commitment to finance the buildings and improvements 5 2 By May 1895 the 250 000 in bonds had been raised 12 but the plans had not been fully confirmed 13 The Board of Directors then asked landscape architect Calvert Vaux and his partner Parks Superintendent Samuel Parsons Jr to consult on site selection The north end of Bronx Park was decided as the best location for the NYBG 14 By August 1895 the architects had started a survey on the site Because the Bronx River and various small tributaries ran through the park drainage was a major consideration 15 Though Vaux s preliminary layout was approved in October 1895 he died the following month 5 3 The topographical survey was completed in March 1896 16 The master plan was created by a team that included Britton amp Parsons as well as landscape engineer John R Brinley landscape gardener Samuel Henshaw botanist Lucien Marcus Underwood and architects Robert W Gibson and Lincoln Pierson the latter from the firm Lord amp Burnham 5 3 The LuEsther T Mertz Library and Enid A Haupt Conservatory were among the first structures at the NYBG to open The Library was built between 1897 and 1900 5 4 and the Conservatory was built around the same time being completed in 1902 17 1900s to 1980s edit For over a century after its opening the NYBG refused to charge admission 18 Because of this as well as insufficient government and private funding its budget deficit started to increase in the 1950s 19 After the city cut the NYBG s budget in 1970 the garden was forced to remain closed for 3 to 4 days a week and officials worried that this could eventually lead to permanent closure 20 In 1974 for the first time in the botanical garden s history officials had to annually petition New York State Legislature for funds That year the NYBG announced a major renovation to the conservatory and the addition of a building dedicated to displaying plants in different habitats 19 The next year budget cuts related to the 1975 New York City fiscal crisis resulted in the NYBG being closed on weekdays for the first time in its history 21 In 1988 the NYBG announced a renovation of its museum building including the addition of a new annex which was supposed to open in 1991 22 By the early 1990s the NYBG facilities were neglected The garden did not have enough space in its parking lots to accommodate all its visitors turning away potential guests Many areas were neglected except for the 40 acres 16 ha surrounding the conservatory and a wetland had even been created unintentionally due to a broken sewer 23 A controversy arose in 1994 when the adjacent Fordham University proposed building a 480 foot tall 150 m radio tower for its radio station WFUV directly across from the Haupt Conservatory 24 The dispute continued until 2002 after several years of failed resolutions when Montefiore Medical Center offered to move WFUV s antenna to its own facilities 25 1990s to present edit By the mid 1990s additions to the NYBG were being undertaken to reverse years of neglect 23 In 1994 the formerly free garden started charging an admission fee to fund these improvements as well as the continued maintenance of existing facilities 18 The Everett Children s Garden opened in mid 1998 26 By 2000 the NYBG had requested 300 million for renovations including a new gift shop and renovation of the greenhouses and roads 27 A new visitor center and gift shop were announced the following year which would replace temporary facilities built in 1990 28 The new main entrance with a gift shop bookstore plaza restrooms cafe and information kiosks was completed in 2004 at a cost of 21 million 29 Meanwhile the addition of the library annex was delayed to 1994 30 then to 2000 31 Construction on the annex started in 1998 32 and it opened in 2002 as the International Plant Science Center 33 In 2000 the NYBG began raising money for a 300 million renovation campaign after the city government donated 22 million 34 The NYBG s International Plant Science Center reopened in 2002 following a renovation 35 36 Several other projects were completed and programs implemented in the 2000s In 2004 the Leon Levy Visitor Center opened as the Botanical Garden s main entrance It included the NYBG Shop and the Pine Tree Cafe 37 The following year the Nolen Greenhouses for Living Collections opened with its publicly accessible Bourke Sullivan Display House 38 The Plant Research Laboratory was completed in early 2005 39 and opened the next year at a cost of 23 million 40 41 In addition to restoring or redesigning existing gardens and collections such as the Ladies Border 2002 42 the Benenson Ornamental Conifers 2004 43 the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden 2007 44 the Thain Family Forest 2011 45 and the Marjorie G Rosen Seasonal Walk by Piet Oudolf 2014 46 the New York Botanical Garden added new gardens and collections to its grounds the Home Gardening Center 2005 47 the Maureen K Chilton Azalea Garden 2011 by landscape architect Shavaun Towers of Towers Golde LLC 48 and Native Plant Garden 2013 by landscape architect Sheila Brady of Oehme van Sweden 49 Off site the institution opened The New York Botanical Garden Midtown Education Center in Manhattan in 2010 50 NYBG added a parking garage the Peter J Sharp Building nearby in 2012 along with a Bedford Gate entrance to the Garden 51 NYBG restored its Lorillard Snuff Mill in 2010 and it was named the Lillian and Amy Goldman Stone Mill 52 NYBG s Humanities Research Institute supported by The Andrew W Mellon Foundation was created in 2014 to stimulate public discourse about humankind s relationship with nature and the environment 53 NYBG opened an on site restaurant the Hudson Garden Grill in 2015 54 It redesigned and reopened its East Gate entrance in 2017 55 The Edible Academy an educational facility for teaching children families educators and the general public about vegetable gardening nutrition awareness and environmental stewardship opened in 2018 56 In February 2020 NYBG announced that it was partnering with Douglaston Development to create affordable apartments on the northwest edge of the garden 57 Grounds edit nbsp The Stone Mill within NYBGThe Garden contains 50 different gardens and plant collections There is a serene cascade waterfall as well as wetlands and a 50 acre 20 ha tract of original never logged old growth New York forest 58 Garden highlights include the 1890s vintage Haupt Conservatory designed by Lord amp Burnham the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden originally laid out by Beatrix Jones Farrand in 1916 an alpine rock garden designed and installed by Thomas H Everett in the 1930s 59 an Herb Garden designed by Penelope Hobhouse 60 and a 37 acre 15 ha conifer collection The NYBG s extensive research facilities include a propagation center 550 000 volume research library 61 and an herbarium of 7 2 to 7 8 million botanical specimens dating back more than three centuries among the largest in the world 62 63 Specialty gardens and collections edit At the heart of the Garden is the Thain Family Forest 64 an old growth forest It is the largest existing remnant of the original forest which covered all of New York City before the arrival of European settlers in the 17th century The forest which was never logged contains oaks American beeches cherry birch tulip and white ash trees some more than two centuries old 45 65 The forest itself is split by the Bronx River the only freshwater river in New York City and this stretch of the river includes a riverine canyon and rapids 58 Along the shores sits the Stone Mill previously known as the Lorillard Snuff Mill built in 1840 66 Sculptor Charles Tefft created the Fountain of Life on the grounds in 1905 5 9 The Ladies Border originally commissioned by the Women s Auxiliary Committee in the 1920s 67 was designed by Ellen Shipman 68 and installed between 1931 and 1933 It consists of a sheltered area measuring 30 by 300 feet 9 1 by 91 4 m across near the Haupt Conservatory 69 In 2000 designer Lynden B Miller created a new plan for the Ladies Border 69 70 The Jane Watson Irwin Perennial Garden was designed in the 1970s by Dan Kiley and redefined by Miller in the 1980s and again in 2003 71 Structures edit Research laboratories edit nbsp The Peggy Rockefeller Rose GardenThe Pfizer Plant Research Laboratory named for Pfizer is a two story 28 000 square foot 2 600 m2 research building that opened in 2006 40 41 The laboratory studies plant genomics molecular systematics plant use in New York City s immigrant communities and the processes through which plants create neurotoxins 41 The building has nine labs one of which is a lab with robotic workstations on the second floor 40 Genomic DNA from many different species is extracted to create a library of the DNA of the world s plants This collection is stored in a DNA storage room with 20 freezers housing millions of specimens including rare endangered or extinct species LuEsther T Mertz Library edit Main article LuEsther T Mertz Library nbsp LuEsther T Mertz LibraryFounded in 1899 and named after supporter LuEsther Mertz 61 the LuEsther T Mertz Library is located in the northern section of the NYBG 58 A 2002 New York Times article mentioned that the library had 775 000 items and 6 5 million plant specimens in its collection 33 while a book published in 2014 by the NYBG mentioned that the library had 550 000 physical volumes and 1 800 journal titles 61 As of 2016 update the Mertz Library still contained one of the world s largest collections of botany related texts 72 73 The library is housed in what was formerly known as the NYBG s Museum Building or Administration Building which started construction in 1897 74 and was completed in 1900 75 The structure was designed by Robert W Gibson 76 in the Renaissance Revival style 5 1 Enid A Haupt Conservatory edit Main article Enid A Haupt Conservatory nbsp The Haupt Conservatory in fallThe Enid A Haupt Conservatory named after Enid A Haupt is a greenhouse near the western end of the NYBG 58 The conservatory was designed by the major greenhouse company of the late 1890s Lord and Burnham Co The design was modeled after the Palm House at the Royal Botanic Garden and Joseph Paxton s Crystal Palace in Italian Renaissance style 77 Groundbreaking took place on January 3 1899 and the conservatory was completed in 1902 at a cost of 177 000 77 The building was constructed by John R Sheehan under contract for the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 78 Since the original construction major renovations took place in 1935 1950 1978 and 1993 77 The conservatory houses numerous tropical plants and flowers cacti and other desert plants and rainforest vegetation In summer months the two pools adjacent to the conservatory display many varieties of lotuses and water lilies 79 William amp Lynda Steere Herbarium edit The William amp Lynda Steere Herbarium in the International Plant Science Center behind the library 58 is one of the largest herbaria in the world with approximately 7 2 million 62 to 7 8 million specimens 63 80 after the French National Museum of Natural History in Paris Founded in 1891 the herbarium quickly became a repository for many important collections In 1895 the garden incorporated the herbarium of Columbia College an acquisition of approximately 600 000 specimens including the private herbaria of John Torrey and C F Meisner In 1945 the garden incorporated the herbaria of the Columbia College of Pharmacy and Princeton University 81 The herbarium is named after William Steere son of William C Steere and his wife Lynda who endowed the herbarium in 2002 63 82 The Index Herbariorum code assigned to this botanic garden is NY 83 and it is used when citing housed specimens Programs editIn 2008 Alfred P Sloan Foundation granted the NYBG 572 000 to begin a project called TreeBOL the Tree Barcode of Life 84 By sampling the DNA from as many as 100 000 different species of trees from around the world TreeBOL will document the diversity of plant life and advance the process of plant DNA barcoding 85 A staff of 200 trains 42 doctoral students at a time Since the 1890s scientists from the NYBG have mounted about 2 000 exploratory missions worldwide to collect plants in the wild School of Professional Horticulture edit In 1932 Thomas H Everett expanded an existing training program into a robust curriculum for developing professional horticulturists 86 Patterned after diploma programs at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh the School for Gardeners combined academic studies with hands on practical experience in a two year full time program With the exception of a hiatus during and after the Second World War the School has trained students since then Now called the School of Professional Horticulture this fully accredited program 87 continues to develop horticulturists of the highest caliber for positions in both public and private gardens 88 After successfully completing the program students receive The New York Botanical Garden s Diploma in Horticulture Exhibitions editThe New York Botanical Garden has mounted public exhibitions throughout its history In 1992 NYBG began presenting what would eventually be called the Holiday Train Show an annual exhibition of model trains running through a display of New York landmarks made of natural materials 89 In 2002 it introduced The Orchid Show an annual exhibition of orchid displays and designed installations with changing themes 90 Beginning in 2007 the Garden added an annual fall exhibition of kiku Japanese chrysanthemums trained to grow in modern and ancient forms 91 The New York Botanical Garden has also presented large scale stand alone exhibitions including Sculpture from the Museum of Modern Art at The New York Botanical Garden 2002 92 Chihuly at The New York Botanical Garden 2006 93 Darwin s Garden An Evolutionary Adventure 2008 94 Moore in America Monumental Sculpture at The New York Botanical Garden 2008 2009 95 Emily Dickinson s Garden The Poetry of Flowers 2010 96 Spanish Paradise Gardens of the Alhambra 2011 97 Monet s Garden 2012 98 Manolo Valdes Monumental Sculpture 2012 99 Frida Kahlo Art Garden Life 2015 100 Impressionism American Gardens on Canvas 2016 101 CHIHULY 2017 102 Georgia O Keeffe Visions of Hawai i 2018 103 Brazilian Modern The Living Art of Roberto Burle Marx 2019 104 KUSAMA Cosmic Nature 2021 105 and things come to thrive in the shedding in the molting by Ebony Patterson 106 107 Executive leadership editDr Nathaniel Lord Britton 1891 1929 108 Elmer D Merrill 1930 1935 109 Dr Marshall A Howe 1935 1936 110 Dr Henry A Gleason acting 1937 1938 111 Dr William J Robbins 1938 1958 112 Dr William C Steere 1958 1972 113 Dr Howard S Irwin 1973 1979 114 James M Hester 1980 1989 115 Gregory Long 1989 2018 116 Dr Carrie Rebora Barratt 2018 2020 117 Jennifer Bernstein 2021 Present 118 Publications editThe NYBG published The Garden Journal ISSN 0016 4585 from 1977 to 1990 and from 1931 has produced the scientific journal Brittonia 119 Landmark status editThe New York Botanical Garden was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1967 2 120 121 In addition three structures are designated as individual New York City landmarks the Enid A Haupt Conservatory designated in 1973 17 1 the LuEsther T Mertz Library 2009 5 1 and the Lorillard Snuff Mill 1966 66 also separately on the National Register of Historic Places 122 See also edit nbsp Architecture portal nbsp National Register of Historic Places portal nbsp New York City portalEducation in New York City List of herbaria in North America List of botanical gardens and arboretums in New York List of museums and cultural institutions in New York City List of National Historic Landmarks in New York City National Register of Historic Places listings in Bronx County New York Other botanical gardens in New York City Brooklyn Botanic Garden Queens Botanical Garden Staten Island Botanical GardenReferences editCitations edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 a b The New York Botanical Garden National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service September 17 2007 Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Mission and History New York Botanical Garden Retrieved April 12 2012 a b c Tanner Ogden 1991 The New York Botanical Garden New York Walker and Company pp 47 50 ISBN 9780802711410 a b c d e f g h i j k l Museum Building Fountain of Life and Tulip Tree Allee New York Botanical Garden PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission March 24 2009 a b c d Jackson Kenneth T ed 1995 The Encyclopedia of New York City New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0300055366 Bronx Park Highlights New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved June 28 2019 The Albany Legislators PDF The New York Times March 25 1884 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 8 2017 Proposed New Parks PDF The New York Times January 24 1884 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 8 2017 a b c d An act to provide for the establishment of a botanic garden and arboretum Laws of the State of New York Passed at the Sessions 114th Session 523 525 1891 via HathiTrust Fordham University History Fordham Cemetery Fordham University Libraries Archived from the original on January 1 2020 Retrieved January 1 2020 Botanical Garden Plans Prof Britton s Lecture Before the Gardeners Club The New York Times May 10 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2019 For the Botanic Garden Only 11 000 Needed to Complete the 250 000 Required Fund The New York Times June 13 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2019 No Better Site Found The Choice of Bronx Park for a Botanical Garden The New York Times August 18 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2019 Botanic Garden Survey Work in Bronx Park Will Be Begun Within a Short Time The New York Times August 15 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2019 Plans for the Botanic Garden Work to be Begun in the Spring The New York Times March 8 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2019 a b The Conservatory New York Botanical Garden PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission October 16 1973 a b Purdy Matthew August 2 1994 Bronx Garden Imposes Fee For Admission The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 a b Carmody Deirdre March 13 1974 Bronx Botanical Garden Sprouts Plan To Erect New Building and Fix Old One The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Botanical Garden Feels Budget Pinch The New York Times December 22 1970 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Hess John L December 27 1975 Cuts Force Closings at Botanical Garden The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Anderson Susan Heller February 24 1988 Bronx Botanical Garden Plans an Expansion The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 a b Martin Douglas December 13 1995 Garden Grows in New Direction Struggling Bronx Institution Aims to Widen Appeal The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Dunlap David W July 6 1994 A Tower Pits Fordham vs Botanical Garden The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Elliott Andrea May 14 2004 Deal Would End 10 Year Feud on Fordham s Radio Tower The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Travel Advisory A Children s Garden Grows in the Bronx The New York Times April 19 1998 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Lipton Eric October 4 2000 Botanical Garden Is Seeking 300 Million The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Postings 9 Million Project at New York Botanical Garden Designed by Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer Associates Amid the Flowers a Visitor Center The New York Times February 4 2001 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Collins Glenn April 24 2004 Seeing the Garden From the Trees For Its New Visitor Center Botanical Landmark Preserves the Landscaping The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 The Botanical Garden sows 32M project New York Daily News October 7 1992 p 33 Retrieved November 5 2019 via newspapers com nbsp POSTINGS New for New York Botanical Garden Ivy Walled Herbarium The New York Times November 2 1997 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Cornerstone unveiled for Bronx botany study center Democrat and Chronicle September 29 1998 p 1 Retrieved November 5 2019 via newspapers com nbsp a b Collins Glenn April 15 2002 Beyond Flowers a Grove of Academe Refurbished Botanical Garden Looks to Raise Scholarly Profile The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 7 2019 Lipton Eric October 4 2000 Botanical Garden Is Seeking 300 Million The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2023 Dunham Jillian April 28 2002 Travel Advisory Seven Million Plant Specimens and Counting The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2023 Weil Jennifer May 1 2002 100M Study Center in Bloom Daily News p 121 Retrieved August 2 2023 Giovannini Joseph May 6 2004 Flower Power New York Retrieved September 4 2020 Raver Anne May 5 2005 A Garden s Future in Glass Houses The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 4 2020 Wolfer Sondra March 10 2005 23M Lab Taking Shape Daily News p 112 Retrieved August 2 2023 a b c Collins Glenn March 12 2006 A Place to Work on Darwin s Abominable Mystery The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2023 a b c Wolfer Sondra May 21 2006 23M Pfizer Lab to Study Plants Daily News p 43 Retrieved August 2 2023 Ladies Border New York Botanical Garden 2004 Retrieved September 8 2020 Raver Anne October 28 2004 Forever Green The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 8 2020 Collins Glenn June 22 2007 Romancing the Rose in Its Infinite Splendor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 8 2020 a b Rothstein Edward November 3 2011 Where the Lenape Trod The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 9 2019 Higgins Adrian December 10 2014 Why We Need Horticulturists The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved September 8 2020 Home Gardening Center New York Botanical Garden 2005 Retrieved September 8 2020 Rothstein Edward May 5 2011 A Method Behind All the Wildness The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 8 2020 Higgins Adrian May 17 2013 Public gardens A new model blossoms The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved September 8 2020 Midtown Education Center NYC ARTS 2010 Retrieved September 4 2020 Rocchio Patrick April 8 2012 NYBG opens garage and intermodal facility Bronx Times Retrieved September 4 2020 Mitchell Max September 22 2010 Historic stone mill restored Bronx Times Retrieved September 4 2020 Hollander Sophia June 19 2014 New York Botanical Garden Going Beyond Botany The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved September 4 2020 Beggs Alex April 9 2015 A New Restaurant Is Blooming at The New York Botanical Garden Vanity Fair Retrieved September 4 2020 Hanssen Adeline Cruz David April 27 2017 NYBG Reopens East Gate Following 10 Year 3 3 Million Renovation Norwood News Retrieved September 4 2020 Wirsing Robert June 25 2018 NYBG s Edible Garden to bear fruits of knowledge Bronx Times Retrieved September 4 2020 Spivack Caroline February 12 2020 New York Botanical Garden plans Bronx affordable housing project Curbed NY Retrieved February 13 2020 a b c d e Interactive Map New York Botanical Garden Retrieved November 7 2019 Ferreniea Viki May 10 1987 Westchester Opinion Botanical Rock Garden Completed in 1934 Gets a New Name The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 3 2021 Donald Caroline March 30 2008 Gardening guru Penelope Hobhouse sells her Dorset house and garden The Sunday Times Retrieved May 5 2017 a b c New York Botanical Garden Fraser S M Sellers V B 2014 Flora Illustrata Great Works from the LuEsther T Mertz Library of the New York Botanical Garden New York Botanical Garden p 33 ISBN 978 0 300 19662 7 Retrieved November 7 2019 a b The William and Lynda Steere Herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden Global Plants JSTOR Retrieved November 7 2019 a b c The William and Lynda Steere Herbarium New York Botanical Garden January 24 2019 Retrieved September 8 2020 Forest New York Botanical Garden Retrieved November 9 2019 20 facts you definitely didn t know about the New York Botanical Garden Time Out New York Retrieved November 9 2019 a b Lorillard Snuff Mill New York Botanical Garden PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission April 19 1966 p 1 Retrieved November 7 2019 Women to Improve Botanical Garden Mrs Arthur H Scribner Chairman of Advisory Council Talks on Plans The New York Times May 23 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2023 Mrs Ellen Shipman Landscape Designer The New York Times March 29 1950 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2023 a b Miller L B 2009 Parks Plants and People Beautifying The Urban Landscape WW Norton p 29 ISBN 978 0 393 73203 0 Retrieved August 2 2023 Information Plant Research Guides Ladies Border Home libguides nybg org Retrieved March 17 2021 Edeiken Louise Jane Watson Irwin Perennial Garden New York Botanical Garden Retrieved February 25 2020 Blakemore Erin Go Inside New York s Nearly Secret Botanical Library Smithsonian Retrieved November 7 2019 Brooks Katherine July 5 2016 Welcome To The Library Hiding In A Garden Hiding In New York City HuffPost Retrieved November 7 2019 New York Botanical Garden Brooklyn Daily Eagle January 11 1897 p 12 Retrieved November 6 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Harlem and the Bronx Brooklyn Daily Eagle March 27 1900 p 15 Retrieved November 6 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp For the Study of Botany a Quarter of a Million Dollars for a Building The New York Times November 28 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2019 a b c Koebner Linda 1997 Green house Landscape Architecture 87 5 62 Tanner Ogden 1991 The New York Botanical Garden An Illustrated Chronicle of Plants and People Walker and Company p 90 ISBN 978 0 8027 1141 0 Conservatory New York Botanical Garden Index Herbariorum The William amp Lynda Steere Herbarium New York Botanical Garden Retrieved November 7 2019 Holmgren P K Kallunki J A Thiers B M 1996 A short description of the collections of The New York Botanical Garden Herbarium NY PDF Brittonia 48 3 285 296 doi 10 1007 BF02805288 S2CID 31231903 William and Lynda Steere New York Botanical Garden Index Herbariorum Steere Herbarium New York Botanical Garden Retrieved November 29 2021 Leafing Through Catalog Daily News May 4 2008 p 37 Retrieved August 2 2023 Tree BOL to Barcode World s 100 000 Trees www bgci org Archived from the original on December 23 2017 Retrieved May 4 2008 School of Professional Horticulture New York Botanical Garden New York Botanical Garden Retrieved March 15 2021 Licensing amp Accreditation New York Botanical Garden New York Botanical Garden Retrieved March 15 2021 CHOOSING A CAREER AS A HORTICULTURIST timesmachine nytimes com Retrieved March 15 2021 Rothstein Edward December 5 2008 Where All New Yorkers Can See the City Anew The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Stamp Elizabeth February 28 2015 Living Chandeliers Are the Highlight of NYBG s Orchid Show Architectural Digest Retrieved September 10 2020 Sura Jeselsohn October 27 2017 A Japanese take on the famous chrysanthemum The Riverdale Press Retrieved September 10 2020 Sculpture from The Museum of Modern Art at The New York Botanical Garden Museum of Modern Art Retrieved September 10 2020 Johnson Ken July 14 2006 Odes to Nature Grand and Demure at Two Bronx Gardens The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Brown Jay Roy May 29 2008 Charles Darwin gardener Christian Science Monitor Retrieved September 10 2020 Kennedy Randy May 23 2008 Giants Amid the Blooms The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Cotter Holland April 29 2010 The Poet as Gardener and Tiger Lily The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Kaufman Joanne June 15 2011 Evolution of a Garden The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved September 10 2020 Johnson Ken May 17 2012 Giverny Blooms in the Bronx The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Pogrebin Robin August 28 2012 Reflections of Nature Towering in the Grass The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Cascone Sarah May 13 2015 Frida Kahlo s Vision Comes to Life at New York Botanical Garden artnet Retrieved September 10 2020 Kahn Eve M May 12 2016 At New York Botanical Garden Time to Smell the Impressionists Roses The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 10 2020 Foxley David April 21 2017 Inside the Most Visually Arresting Art Installation of the Year Architectural Digest Retrieved September 10 2020 Frey Angelica May 30 2018 Georgia O Keeffe s Visions of Hawai I Blossom in the Bronx Hyperallergic Retrieved September 10 2020 Roth Katherine July 30 2019 Huge NY show honors Brazilian Modern landscape architect Associated Press Retrieved September 10 2020 Kusama Cosmic Nature Retrieved November 11 2021 things come to thrive in the shedding in the molting New York Botanical Garden New York Botanical Garden Retrieved July 29 2023 Heinrich Will June 15 2023 Ebony G Patterson Brings a Crowd to the New York Botanical Garden The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 29 2023 Nathaniel Lord Britton records RG4 New York Botanical Garden 2006 Retrieved September 11 2018 Elmer Drew Merill records RG4 New York Botanical Garden 2006 Retrieved September 11 2018 Stafler Frans Antonie Cowan Richard S 1976 Howe Marshall Avery Taxonomic literature a selective guide to botanical publications and collections with dates commentaries and types Vol I 2nd ed Utrecht Bohn Scheltema amp Holkema pp 347 48 ISBN 9789031302246 OCLC 2709682 Henry A Gleason records RG4 New York Botanical Garden 2006 Retrieved September 12 2018 Kavanagh Frederick Hervey Annette 1991 William Jacob Robbins 1890 1978 PDF Biographical Memoirs Vol 60 Washington D C National Academy of Sciences pp 301 306 Crum Howard 1977 William Campbell Steere an account of his life and work The Bryologist 80 4 662 694 doi 10 2307 3242430 JSTOR 3242430 Howard S Irwin records RG4 New York Botanical Garden 2006 Retrieved September 13 2018 James Hester 90 Dies Guided N Y U to Become a Major University The New York Times January 3 2015 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 13 2018 Kahn Eve M April 20 2017 A Farewell to Flowers Botanical Garden s Leader Steps Down The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 13 2018 Bagcal Jenna July 10 2020 CEO and first female president of New York Botanical Garden in The Bronx steps down Bronx Times Retrieved September 4 2020 Poblete Gabriel June 16 2021 New York Botanical Garden hires NRDC exec as president Crain s New York Business Retrieved August 31 2021 Brittonia Springer Nature 2020 Retrieved May 10 2020 New York Botanical Garden January 22 1976 by Richard Greenwood National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination National Park Service January 22 1976 New York Botanical Garden Accompanying 17 photos from c 1962 National Park Service January 22 1976 Lorillard Snuff Mill National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service September 15 2007 Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Sources edit Lederman L Forrest T Long G 2012 Magnificent Trees of the New York Botanical Garden Monacelli Press ISBN 978 1 58093 333 9 Long G Forrest T A 2016 The New York Botanical Garden Revised and Updated Edition Harry N Abrams ISBN 978 1 4197 1975 2 External links edit nbsp Wikidata has the property nbsp C V Starr Virtual Herbarium ID P6035 see uses nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York Botanical Garden nbsp Wikispecies has information related to NY Official website Plant Talk Inside The New York Botanical Garden blog New York Botanical Garden collected news and commentary at The New York Times Brittonia at HathiTrust Digital Library Brittonia at SCImago Journal Rank Brittonia at Botanical Scientific Journals The New York Botanical Garden The Steere Herbarium YouTube July 11 2013 Archived from the original on November 17 2021 The New York Botanical Garden Mertz Library Tour YouTube July 11 2013 Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York Botanical Garden amp oldid 1190364636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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