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Bartram's Garden

Coordinates: 39°55′50″N 75°12′45″W / 39.93056°N 75.21250°W / 39.93056; -75.21250
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John Bartram House
John Bartram's house and upper garden at Bartram's Garden
Location5400 Lindbergh Blvd., Philadelphia
Coordinates39°55′50″N 75°12′45″W / 39.93056°N 75.21250°W / 39.93056; -75.21250
Built1728
ArchitectJohn Bartram
Architectural styleColonial
Visitation100,000+ per year
NRHP reference No.66000676[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966
Designated NHLOctober 9, 1960

Bartram's Garden is a 50-acre public garden and National Historic Landmark in Southwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, situated on the banks of the Tidal Schuylkill River. Founded in 1728 by botanist John Bartram (1699–1777), it is the oldest surviving botanical garden in North America. The Garden is operated by the non-profit John Bartram Association in cooperation with Philadelphia Parks and Recreation.

Bartram's Garden has the only recreational access to the Tidal Schuylkill River and its wetlands. Its trails make up segments of the East Coast Greenway. The garden acts as an outdoor classroom for learning about the plants and history of Southwest Philadelphia.[2] The John Bowman Bartram Special Collections Library contains a vast collection of documents and materials related to the history of the Garden, the history of Philadelphia, and the development of the field of botany. The garden also serves as a venue for art.

The garden

Colonial American botanist John Bartram founded the garden on his farm in Kingsessing, west of the Schuylkill River and miles outside and south of the what were then the borders of Philadelphia.[3] He built its stone house between 1728 and 1731, added a kitchen around 1740, and installed a Palladian-inspired, carved facade between 1758 and 1770. The house still stands, as does his original garden (circa 1728) and greenhouse (1760).[4] Three generations of the Bartram family continued the garden as the premier collection of North American plant species in the world. They sold it in 1850.[5]

The current collection contains a wide variety of native and exotic species of herbaceous and woody plants.[6] Most were listed in the Bartrams' 1783 broadside Catalogue of American Trees, Shrubs and Herbaceous Plants and subsequent editions.[7]

Biking on the Bartram's Mile trail at Bartram's Garden
Franklinia alatamaha illustration by William Bartram

The garden contains three notable trees:

  • Franklinia alatamaha (Franklin Tree): William and John Bartram, Jr. encountered a small grove of this tree on October 1, 1765 while camping by Georgia's Altamaha River.[8][9] William eventually brought seeds to the Garden, where they were planted in 1777.[10] The species, named in honor of John Bartram's friend Benjamin Franklin, was last seen in the wild in 1803. All Franklinia growing today are descended from those propagated and distributed by the Bartrams. They are credited with having saved it from extinction.[11] There are a number of Franklinia on site at Bartram's Garden; the largest is located in the Common Flower Garden to the east of the Bartram House.
  • Cladrastis kentukea (Yellowwood): A notably old tree, possibly collected by French plant explorer André Michaux in Tennessee in 1796 and later sent to William Bartram.[2] This specimen is located by the Kitchen Garden to the east of the Bartram House; there is another large, though younger, specimen slightly further east.[12]
  • Ginkgo biloba (Ginkgo): This male ginkgo is believed to be the oldest ginkgo tree in North America, as the last of three original ginkgoes introduced in 1785 to the United States from China, via London.[2] It is located to the east of the Bartram Barn.

Landscape history

Stone carving by John Bartram dated 1770 on the east-facing side of the Bartram House

Bartram's Garden is the oldest botanic garden to survive in the United States.[13]John Bartram (1699–1777), well-known in colonial American as a botanist, explorer, and plant collector, established the garden in September 1728 after purchasing a 102-acre (0.41 km2) farm in Kingsessing Township, Philadelphia County for personal use.[14][15]

With his lifelong devotion to plants, he developed it as a systematic collection. Increasingly he devoted himself to exploration, discovering new specimens and North American species, making substantial scientific achievements. John Bartram engaged in extensive exchanges of both plant materials and information with other botanists and operated a flourishing business based around transatlantic trade in plants. By the mid-eighteenth century, Bartram's Garden had "the most varied collection of North American plants in the world."[15]

Following the American Revolution and John Bartram's death in 1777, Bartram's sons William Bartram (1739–1823) and John Bartram Jr. (1743–1812) continued the the family's international trade in plants. They expanded both the botanic garden and the plant nursery. William became a respected naturalist, artist, and author using the garden to train the next generation of explorers and natural scientists. While Philadelphia operated as the temporary capital of the new nation, prominent visitors to the garden included members of the Continental Congress of 1784 and President George Washington in 1787.[12] Manasseh Cutler, an amateur botanist from Massachusetts, gave a detailed account of his visit to the garden in 1787.[16] William Bartram's travel book, published in 1791, chronicled his explorations in the South.[17] Considered a classic in American nature writing, an edition was published as recently as 1998.[18]

After the death of John Bartram Jr. in 1812, his daughter Ann Bartram Carr (1779–1858), her husband Colonel Robert Carr (1778–1866) and later their son John Bartram Carr (1804–1839) took over the farm and business. They continued the international commercial trade in native plants of North American. Domestic demand also increased under their management, and they established an additional specimen garden to the west of the Bartram House to showcase popular new flowering plants.[19]

In 1850, financial difficulties resulted in the family selling the historic garden to Andrew M. Eastwick (1811–1879), who maintained it privately as a park for his estate. Following Eastwick's death in 1879, botanist Thomas Meehan (1826–1901) organized a campaign in Philadelphia to preserve the garden. Charles S. Sargent of Boston, Massachusetts, who worked at the Arnold Arboretum, helped to organize a national campaign for funds. The City of Philadelphia assumed control of the site in 1891, protecting it as a city park. The John Bartram Association was formally organized in 1893, to oversee preservation and presentation of the garden, house, and outbuildings.[15] The garden was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1960.[14]

The garden's plant collection includes only a few extant examples dating from the Bartram family occupancy; however, documentation for what was once in cultivation is rich. The first century of public ownership left the garden wanting in terms of care and interpretation. Despite the disappearance of a number of subsidiary physical elements in the landscape, the garden's rectilinear framework, designed and laid out by Bartram during the second quarter of the eighteenth century, is still recognizable.[15][20] In 2011, four acres along the Garden's southern border were established as the Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram's Garden, an African Diaspora-focused crop farm.[21] 2016 marked the opening of the Ann Bartram Carr Garden, a restoration of the 19th-century semi-circular specimen garden to the west of the Bartram House.[22]

Bartram's Garden's long existence as a living botanical space, and its resonance with the surrounding area's history make it an unparalleled site for presenting and interpreting eighteenth- and nineteenth-century botanic and agricultural studies, the development of the field of botany, the plant and seed business in North American, the lives of John Bartram and his family, and domestic life in Philadelphia. [15]

Digital panoramic photo of the Ann Bartram Carr Garden on the west-facing side of the Bartram House (center) taken August 2017

Rambo's Rock

Bartram's Garden has a community-powered boathouse to support free rowboating, kayaking, and fishing on the Tidal Schuylkill River. Rowboats are built by middle-school students at the nearby Richard Allen Preparatory Charter School.

Rambo's Rock was a large boulder on the eastern edge of the Schuylkill River, directly across from Bartram's Garden, just south of Grays Ferry[23] on the plantation of Swedish immigrants Peter and Brita Rambo.[24] The rock has disappeared and been replaced with a wharf. 39°55′48″N 75°12′29″W / 39.93°N 75.208°W / 39.93; -75.208

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c Sundberg, Marshall D. (2020). "Bartram's Garden: a Legacy of Colonial American Botany" (PDF). Plant Science Bulletin. 66 (1). Botanical Society of America: 16–33. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Bartram's Flower Garden". Archived from the original on 2014-08-14.
  4. ^ Hoffmann, Nancy Everill; Horne, John C. Van (2004). America's Curious Botanist: A Tercentennial Reappraisal of John Bartram, 1699-1777. American Philosophical Society. ISBN 978-0-87169-249-8.
  5. ^ Costa, Manuel Jorge Rodrigues Couceiro da; Roseta, Filipa; Lages, Joana Pestana; Costa, Susana Couceiro da (8 August 2019). Architectural Research Addressing Societal Challenges: Proceedings of the EAAE ARCC 10th International Conference (EAAE ARCC 2016), 15-18 June 2016, Lisbon, Portugal. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-351-84957-9.
  6. ^ "Bartram Nursery Catalog" (PDF). Bartram’s Garden. 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  7. ^ Bartram, William (1802). William Batram's garden diaries, volume 1. [s.n.] doi:10.5962/bhl.title.146890.
  8. ^ Fry, Joel T. (2000). "Franklinia alatamaha, A History of That "Very Curious" Shrub" (PDF). Bartram Broadside. No. Winter. John Bartram Association. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  9. ^ Faust, Joan Lee (23 August 1998). "GARDENING; The Curious Tale of Franklinia Alatamaha". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  10. ^ Halley, Franklinia Flowers BMatthew R. (29 July 2017). "Franklinia Flowers". Matthew R. Halley.
  11. ^ Meier, Allison (27 April 2018). "America's Mysterious Lost Tree". JSTOR Daily.
  12. ^ a b Reid, Robin T. (2010). "The Story of Bartram's Garden". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  13. ^ Todisco, Patrice (27 December 2013). "Bartram's Garden: The Oldest Surviving Botanic Garden in the US". Landscape Notes. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  14. ^ a b Chesney, Sarah. "Bartram's Garden". Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  15. ^ a b c d e "HALS No. PA-1, John Bartram House & Garden" (PDF). Historic American Landscapes Survey. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. 2004.
  16. ^ Fry, Joel T. (January–March 1996). "An International Catalogue of North American Trees and Shrubs: The Bartram Broadside, 1783". The Journal of Garden History. 16 (1): 3–66. doi:10.1080/14601176.1996.10435636.
  17. ^ Bartram, William (1791). Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West Florida, the Cherokee Country, the Extensive Territories of the Muscogulges or Creek Confederacy, and the Country of the Chactaws. Containing an Account of the Soil and Natural Productions of Those Regions; Together with Observations on the Manners of the Indians. Philadelphia: James & Johnson. Retrieved August 25, 2018 – via The Library of Congress.
  18. ^ "The Travels of William Bartram". Georgia Press. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  19. ^ "Bartram Botanic Garden and Nursery - History of Early American Landscape Design". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  20. ^ Fry, Joel T. (2004). "John Bartram and His Garden: Would John Bartram Recognize His Garden Today?". In Hoffmann, Nancy E.; Van Horne, John C. (eds.). America's Curious Botanist: A Tercentennial Reappraisal of John Bartram, 1699-1777. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. pp. 155–183. ISBN 087169249X.
  21. ^ Staff, Philadelphia Sun (26 November 2020). "PHS and Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram's Garden create over 50 home garden beds in Southwest Philadelphia". The Philadelphia Sunday Sun. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  22. ^ Dillon, Hugh E (18 July 2016). "Bartram's Gardens Newly Restored Ann Bartram Carr Garden Opens". Philadelphia Magazine. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  23. ^ "Digital Collections: Castle. State in Schuylkill". Free Library of Philadelphia. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  24. ^ A History of the Schuylkill Fishing Company of the State in Schuylkill. Schuylkill Fishing Company. 1889.
  25. ^ "Philadelphia's Historic District Brings Outlander To Life". Visit Philadelphia. December 14, 2017. Retrieved 19 March 2023.