Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Horticultural Innovator | Page 4
a history of horticultural innovation
Acquiring Plants—Building the Collections
Despite a long record of plant purchases, Mount Auburn’s
in-house plant production programs deserve the greater
credit for giving us a world-class botanical collection. Our
first consolidated facility, a complex of greenhouse-nursery
space located on Brattle Street opposite the front gate, was
begun in 1856 with the construction of the first glasshouse.
Subsequent construction brought the overall area under glass
to 5,000 square feet. This was supplemented by numerous
cold frames and hot-beds with the total facility covering
roughly 1.5 acres. Plant production at this facility focused
on starting plants from seeds and cuttings. The technology
used for heating and insulation would seem crude by today’s
standards, yet they represented the best of that period. Mount
Auburn enjoyed the expertise of some of the brightest
growers and horticulturists in the country. Perhaps this, and
the fact that the Cemetery’s horticulture staff numbered
more than a hundred, explains how plant production at
this time was so impressive. A typical year saw more than
250 trees and 400 shrubs planted on the grounds and in an
unusual year (1882), due to reasons that remain a mystery,
645 trees and 1,892 shrubs were planted.
The Brattle Street facility lasted about 80 years until it
was abandoned in 1935. It served the Cemetery during
several significant periods. One of these was the Victorian
period, during which the demand for plants by lot-owners
was unusually high and tastes were exuberant. Rarities and
bold combinations of plants were celebrated. At this time,
tropical plants were commonplace on the grounds and
required careful overwintering inside of glasshouses.
Historical
Documentation
It is fascinating to see
accounts of the initial
efforts to establish the
experimental garden and
cemetery. By 1833-34,
a total of 450 different
varieties of seeds had
been received from around the
world. The most exotic source might have been the Botanical
Society of the Kingdom of Naples, and perhaps one of the more
recognizable exotic plants was the Guul ibrischim or “silk tassel
rose” sent from Turkey. Today we know it as “mimosa” (Albizia
julibrissin), and although the Turkish form proved not hardy in this
climate, eventually a hardier form was discovered in Korea. Some
intriguing correspondence is preserved in Mount Auburn’s historical
archives, which documents an 1896 effort to acquire more than
1,600 plants (67 different species and varieties) from a nursery in
Tokyo. This somewhat daring transaction was financed through the
Chartered Bank of India, Australia, and China, and resulted in some
of the earliest introductions of Japanese plant species to America.
2 | Sweet Auburn
In addition, elaborate
flower beds were
planted in complex
mosaic layouts. Even
the gravel borders
around fountains and
gardens were con-
structed in geometric
patterns using
different colored
stone. In the late
1800s, Mount Auburn
produced more
than 70,000 annuals
per year that were
needed for flower
An aerial view of Story Chapel, the Administration
beds. Today, we
produce only 50,000 Building, and the Brattle Street greenhouses from
despite the Cemetery 1937 (by Fairchild Aerial Surveys)
expanding its acreage by almost 12 percent.
A redefinition of the Cemetery’s horticultural mission by
Oakes Ames in the 1930’s, which essentially called for an
arboretum-like approach to plant acquisitions and a shift
towards using more naturalistic plantings instead of flower
beds, coincided with the establishment of a new green-
house-nursery complex in 1936. This second six-house
facility (23,000 sq. ft. under glass), built on the present-day
“Meadow” and adjacent to more than ten acres of nur