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| Putting a temporary end to my Bronx slump (from summer 2007 through June 2008 and counting, I've only been in the Bronx about 3 or 4 times) I made a quick trip to the New York Botanical Garden to see some roses; I put that in the most basic of terms, since roses are my favorite flowers and what's more, I prefer them in traditional deep red and white. There are hundreds of breeds of roses: but in true plebeian fashion, when asked my favorite variety, I invariably say: the red and white ones, please. The city, by 1891, had allocated 250 acres in the Bronx' central section between the Norwood and Bronxdale regions to be used as a botanical garden. It's developed into one of the world's premier garden showplaces and inspired similar gardens in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island. Note that it's not called the "Bronx Botanical Garden" since the Bronx didn't become a separate county until 1914. |
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Upon handing over your $20 (I'm not being flip and do not begrudge the fee for the upkeep and maintenance of a NYC treasure) and entering the grounds you spot on the left a massive Beaux-Arts building, known formerly as simply the garden's Museum Building but currently called the LuEsther T. Mertz Library (named for a benefactor, the wife of the founder of Publishers Clearing House, Harold Mertz, who became a philanthropist: a good deal of PCH's profits still go to charity). The building dates to 1902 (the same year the famed Enid Haupt Conservatory was built). I was attracted to the object in front...




Turning our attention from scales to petals, a quick tram ride left us at the Peggy Rockefeller Rose Garden. A 2007 New York Times article provided the lowdown on one of NYBG's most beloved June attractions:
The setting of the rose garden, to the southeast in the Botanical Garden where it is bordered by the Bronx River Parkway, is a natural bowl just down the hill from the picturesque Stone Cottage, which dates to the mid-19th century, when the surrounding land was part of the Lorillard estate. The slopes of its margins are punctuated by weathered outcrops of Fordham gneiss.
There in 1916, at what is believed to have been the site of a Lorillard garden and pond, the current rose garden was planned, along with its fencing and gazebo, by Beatrix Jones Farrand, a niece of Edith Wharton and the most fashionable landscape designer of her era...
In the 1980s David Rockefeller donated $1 million in honor of his wife, Peggy, to renovate the rose garden, creating new gates, fencing, walkways and a gazebo, all following the Farrand plan; it opened to the public in 1988. (It was renovated anew in 2007.)




The Rockefeller Garden now displays more than 3,000 rose plants including exquisite antique roses, modern hybrid teas, floribundas, shrub roses, medicinal and miniature roses. Red and white ones too.












Farewell to the Rock Rose for now, but many roses rebloom in October.
HOME | ADS | ALLEYS | CEMETERIES | COBBLESTONES | FORGOTTENSLICES | LAMPS | NEIGHBORHOODS | SIGNS | STREET NECROLOGY | STREET SCENES | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | TROLLEYS | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS | OUT OF TOWN | BOWERY BOYS
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Photographed June 14, 2008; page finished June 16