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John Bartram – Scientist of the Day
John Bartram, a colonial American botanist, was born Mar. 23, 1699, in Pennsylvania.
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Fire on the mountain (Euphorbia cyathophora) at La Macchina Fissa.
Zoom in... the red is not the flower!
Grown from seeds from America’s oldest botanical garden, John Bartram’s Garden, Philadelphia.
John Bartram
John Bartram (1699-1777) was a third-generation Pennsylvania Quaker, born in nearby Darby and imbued with a curiosity and reverence for nature, as well as a passion for scientific inquiry. Bartram purchased 102 acres from Swedish settlers in 1728, and systematically began gathering the most varied collection of North American plants in the world. At home, Bartram co-founded the American Philosophical Society with his friend Benjamin Franklin. His garden was a source of inquiry and pleasure for luminaries like Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. His seed and plant business thrived, with cataloging lists appearing in London publications as early as the 1750s. His international plant trade and nursery business survived him and continued to thrive under the care of three generations of Bartrams.
Bartram’s Garden

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sometimes I see an outlander post on my dash and I just remember that time my mother called me AT WORK to tell me that characters bang in John Bartram’s potting shed (after he died, thank god the poor man would be so traumatized)
"Nothing is More the Child of Art than a Garden"*
“Nothing is More the Child of Art than a Garden”*
In the dead of a winter night, I dreamt of a green, sun-filled garden, filled with the thick fat leaves of a jade plant, the feathery tendrils of ferns. I stood in a glassed-walled room, misty with gauzy air, as many dreams are wont to be. Before me, on the other side of the glass, lay a good acre of greenery, framed by purple bougainvillea, flowers tumbling over a white picket fence, the white…
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Long before North Americans could pick up tomato seedlings at their local hardware store, there was John Bartram. The 18th-century horticulturist supplied seeds to the likes of Thomas Jefferson and established the US’s first botanical garden near the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia. But what gardening enthusiasts mostly remember him for are his boxes — 3-x-2-1/2-foot containers that he carefully packed with plant specimens and then shipped off to prospective buyers in Europe.
Sculptors Pay Tribute to an 18th-Century Botanist in Wood