List of botanical gardens and arboretums in New York

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This list of botanical gardens and arboretums in New York is intended to include all significant botanical gardens and arboretums in the U.S. state of New York. [1] [2] [3]

NameImageAffiliationCityCoordinates
Bailey Arboretum Bailey arboretum tree.jpg Locust Valley 40°53′12″N73°35′01″W / 40.88667°N 73.58361°W / 40.88667; -73.58361
Bard College Arboretum Bee at bard college garden.jpg Bard College Annandale-on-Hudson 42°01′45″N73°54′22″W / 42.02917°N 73.90611°W / 42.02917; -73.90611
Bayard Cutting Arboretum State Park Bayard cutting arboretum.jpg Great River 40°44′9.1″N73°09′44.5″W / 40.735861°N 73.162361°W / 40.735861; -73.162361
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Bbg cherry esplande.jpg New York City (Brooklyn) 40°40′7.32″N73°57′52.92″W / 40.6687000°N 73.9647000°W / 40.6687000; -73.9647000
Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens - 1-10 - IMG 3488.JPG Buffalo 42°49′41″N78°49′33″W / 42.82806°N 78.82583°W / 42.82806; -78.82583
Mary Flagler Cary Arboretum Mary Flagler Cary Arboretum - IMG 1658.jpg Millbrook 41°47′6.72″N73°44′0.96″W / 41.7852000°N 73.7336000°W / 41.7852000; -73.7336000
Clark Botanic Garden Clark Botanic Garden entry jeh.jpg Albertson 40°46′19.92″N73°38′23.28″W / 40.7722000°N 73.6398000°W / 40.7722000; -73.6398000
Cornell Botanic Gardens Cornell Plantations lake.jpg Cornell University Ithaca 42°26′58″N76°28′20″W / 42.44944°N 76.47222°W / 42.44944; -76.47222
Cutler Botanic Garden Cutler Botanic Garden.jpg Binghamton 42°06′08″N75°54′42″W / 42.10222°N 75.91167°W / 42.10222; -75.91167
Ellwanger Garden Ellwanger Garden.jpg Rochester 43°8′15.72″N77°36′54.36″W / 43.1377000°N 77.6151000°W / 43.1377000; -77.6151000
Genesee Country Village and Museum Geneseecountryvillage.jpg Mumford 42°59′33.59″N77°52′48.43″W / 42.9926639°N 77.8801194°W / 42.9926639; -77.8801194
Highland Botanical Park Stairshighlandparkrochester2001.JPG Rochester 43°7′47″N77°36′23″W / 43.12972°N 77.60639°W / 43.12972; -77.60639
Hofstra University Arboretum Hofstra university tulips.jpg Hofstra University Hempstead 40°42′43.8″N73°35′58.3″W / 40.712167°N 73.599528°W / 40.712167; -73.599528
Maud Gordon Holmes Arboretum Buffalo State College Buffalo 42°56′4.92″N78°53′2.04″W / 42.9347000°N 78.8839000°W / 42.9347000; -78.8839000
John P. Humes Japanese Stroll Garden John P. Humes Japanese Stroll Garden - Mill Neck, NY - 2010.jpg Mill Neck 40°52′28.7″N73°34′29.6″W / 40.874639°N 73.574889°W / 40.874639; -73.574889
Innisfree Garden Innisfree Garden 1.jpg Millbrook 41°45′37.27″N73°44′49.54″W / 41.7603528°N 73.7470944°W / 41.7603528; -73.7470944
George Landis Arboretum Esperance 42°47′05″N74°16′13″W / 42.78472°N 74.27028°W / 42.78472; -74.27028
Lasdon Park and Arboretum Lasdon Park and Arboretum, Somers, NY - IMG 1443.jpg Somers 41°16′33.1″N73°44′4.46″W / 41.275861°N 73.7345722°W / 41.275861; -73.7345722
Mountain Top Arboretum Tannersville 42°13′21.2″N74°08′01.2″W / 42.222556°N 74.133667°W / 42.222556; -74.133667
Nannen Arboretum Nannen Arboretum 20160819 04.jpg Ellicottville 42°16′59″N78°40′15″W / 42.28306°N 78.67083°W / 42.28306; -78.67083
New York Botanical Garden Ny-botanical-haupt-conservatory.JPG New York City (The Bronx) 40°51′49″N73°52′42″W / 40.86361°N 73.87833°W / 40.86361; -73.87833
F.R. Newman Arboretum Cornell Arboretum.jpg Cornell University Ithaca 42°26′58″N76°28′20″W / 42.44944°N 76.47222°W / 42.44944; -76.47222
Planting Fields Arboretum Plantfield5597.JPG Oyster Bay 40°51′39″N73°33′26″W / 40.86083°N 73.55722°W / 40.86083; -73.55722
Queens Botanical Garden Queens Botanical Gardens.jpg New York City (Flushing) 40°45′1.44″N73°49′43.68″W / 40.7504000°N 73.8288000°W / 40.7504000; -73.8288000
Sonnenberg Gardens Sonnenberg Mansion, Canandaigua, New York.jpg Canandaigua 42°54′0″N77°16′21″W / 42.90000°N 77.27250°W / 42.90000; -77.27250
Staten Island Botanical Garden New York Chinese Scholar's Garden.JPG New York City (Staten Island) 40°38′33″N74°6′10″W / 40.64250°N 74.10278°W / 40.64250; -74.10278
University of Rochester Arboretum Genesee River and Elmwood Bridge at the University of Rochester.jpg University of Rochester Rochester 43°07′42″N77°37′42″W / 43.12833°N 77.62833°W / 43.12833; -77.62833
Vassar College Arboretum Vassar2.jpg Vassar College Poughkeepsie 41°41′15″N73°53′45″W / 41.68750°N 73.89583°W / 41.68750; -73.89583
Wave Hill Woodland path Wave Hill 1.jpg New York City (The Bronx) 40°53′55″N73°54′47″W / 40.89861°N 73.91306°W / 40.89861; -73.91306

See also

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Arnold Arboretum Botanical garden in Boston, Massachusetts

The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University is a botanical research institution and free public park, located in the Jamaica Plain and Roslindale neighborhoods of Boston, Massachusetts. Established in 1872, it is the oldest public arboretum in North America. The landscape was designed by Charles Sprague Sargent and Frederick Law Olmsted and is the second largest "link" in the Emerald Necklace. The Arnold Arboretum's collection of temperate trees, shrubs, and vines has a particular emphasis on the plants of the eastern United States and eastern Asia, where arboretum staff and colleagues are actively sourcing new material on plant collecting expeditions. The arboretum supports research in its landscape and in its Weld Hill Research Building.

Cornell Botanic Gardens Botanical garden

The Cornell Botanic Gardens is a botanical garden located adjacent to the Cornell University campus in Ithaca, New York. The Botanic Gardens proper consist of 25 acres (10 ha) of botanical gardens and 150 acres (61 ha) of the F. R. Newman Arboretum. The greater Botanic Gardens includes 40 different nature areas around Cornell and Ithaca, covering 4,300 acres (1,700 ha).

<i>Ulmus</i> × <i>hollandica</i> Wredei Hybrid elm cultivar

The hybrid elm cultivar Ulmus × hollandica 'Wredei', also known as Ulmus × hollandica 'Dampieri Aurea' and sometimes marketed as Golden Elm, originated as a sport of the cultivar 'Dampieri' at the Alt-Geltow Arboretum, near Potsdam, Germany, in 1875.

<i>Ulmus americana</i> Delaware Elm cultivar

The American Elm cultivar Ulmus americana 'Delaware' was originally selected from 35,000 seedlings inoculated with the Dutch elm disease fungus in USDA trials at Morristown, New Jersey.

<i>Ulmus minor</i> Propendens Elm cultivar

The Field Elm cultivar Ulmus minor 'Propendens', described by Schneider in 1904 as U. glabra (:minor) var. suberosa propendens, Weeping Cork-barked elm, was said by Krüssmann (1976) to be synonymous with the U. suberosa pendula listed by Lavallée without description in 1877. Earlier still, Loudon's Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannicum had included an illustration of a pendulous "cork-barked field elm", U. campestris suberosa. An U. campestris suberosa pendula was in nurseries by the 1870s.

<i>Ulmus</i> Koopmannii Elm cultivar

The elm cultivar Ulmus 'Koopmannii' was cloned from a specimen raised from seed sent from Margilan, Turkestan by Koopmann to the Botanischer Garten Berlin c. 1880. Noted in 1881 as a 'new elm', it was later listed by the Späth nursery, catalogue no. 62, p. 6. 101, 1885, as Ulmus Koopmannii, and later by Krüssmann in 1962 as a cultivar of U. minor. Margilan is beyond the main range of Ulmus minor. Augustine Henry, who saw the specimens in Berlin and Kew, believed Koopmann's Elm to be a form of Ulmus pumila, a view not shared by Rehder of the Arbold Arboretum. Ascherson & Graebner said the tree produced 'very numerous root shoots', which suggests it may be a cultivar of U. minor. Until DNA analysis can confirm its origin, the cultivar is now treated as Ulmus 'Koopmannii'.

The putative Wych Elm cultivar Ulmus glabra 'Dovaei', or Doué elm, was raised by the André Leroy nursery at Angers, France, as Ulmus dovaei, before 1868. The Baudriller nursery of Angers marketed it as Ulmus Dowei, "orme de Doué", suggesting a link with the royal nurseries at nearby Doué-la-Fontaine, which stocked elm. Green considered it a form of wych.

<i>Ulmus glabra</i> Nana Elm cultivar

The dwarf wych elm cultivar Ulmus glabra 'Nana', a very slow growing shrub that with time forms a small tree, is of unknown origin. It was listed in the Simon-Louis 1869 catalogue as Ulmus montana nana. Henry (1913), referring his readers to an account of the Kew specimen in the journal Woods and Forests, 1884, suggested that it may have originated from a witch's broom. It is usually classified as a form of Ulmus glabra and is known widely as the 'Dwarf Wych Elm'. However, the ancestry of 'Nana' has been disputed in more recent years, Melville considering the specimen once grown at Kew to have been a cultivar of Ulmus × hollandica.

<i>Ulmus</i> Louis van Houtte Elm cultivar

Ulmus 'Louis van Houtte' is believed to have been first cultivated in Ghent, Belgium circa 1863. It was first mentioned by Franz Deegen in 1886. It was once thought a cultivar of English Elm Ulmus minor 'Atinia', though this derivation has long been questioned; W. J. Bean called it "an elm of uncertain status". Its dissimilarity from the type and its Belgian provenance make the 'Atinia' attribution unlikely. Fontaine (1968) considered it probably a form of U. × hollandica.

The Chinese Elm cultivar Ulmus parvifolia 'Catlin' is a dwarf variety specifically raised as a bonsai plant by John Catlin, La Canada, California, circa 1950.

<i>Ulmus parvifolia</i> Species of tree

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<i>Ulmus glabra</i> Concavaefolia Elm cultivar

The Wych Elm cultivar Ulmus glabra 'Concavaefolia', a form with up-curling leaves, was listed in Beissner's Handbuch der Laubholz-Benennung (1903) as Ulmus montana cucullataHort. [:'hooded', the leaf], a synonym of the Ulmus scabraMill. [:glabraHuds.] var. concavaefolia of herbarium specimens. An Ulmus campestris cucullata, of uncertain species, had appeared in Loddiges' 1823 list, but Loudon's brief description (1838) of concave- and hooded-leaved elms was insufficient for later botanists to distinguish them. The earliest unambiguous description appears to be that of Petzold and Kirchner in Arboretum Muscaviense (1864).

References