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    On route and almost there !
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    Downtown Boston from Peter's Hill with Arboretum in foreground
    Downtown Boston from Peter's Hill with Arboretum in foreground
    Mountain Laurels in bloom c.1900
    Mountain Laurels in bloom c.1900
    Strolling a main trail in 2023
    Strolling a main trail in 2023
    There are close ties with neighbors in Jamaica Plain.
    There are close ties with neighbors in Jamaica Plain.
    Cool, comfortable and creative ways abound to deepen visitor's knowledge of trees - look inside!
    Cool, comfortable and creative ways abound to deepen visitor's knowledge of trees - look inside!
    Side trails abound throughout the 281 acres of the Arboretum
    Side trails abound throughout the 281 acres of the Arboretum
    Trees are observable in every part of their life cycle
    Trees are observable in every part of their life cycle
    Fall color on a group of maple trees
    Fall color on a group of maple trees
    Visitors Center and administration at Hunnewell Hall, near the main entrance
    Visitors Center and administration at Hunnewell Hall, near the main entrance
    City map from 1924, showing the Arborway buffering the city and the Arboretum
    City map from 1924, showing the Arborway buffering the city and the Arboretum

    The Arnold Fortune: How Whale Money Bought Trees on Boston’s Emerald Necklace

    If I was a berry-eating robin, I’d be tempted to live at the Arnold Arboretum year-round.  Snow storms be damned!  Bird food is abundant in this 281 acre museum of trees located just 5 miles from the Boston Common.  There are treats there for us humans, too, mostly in the form of eye candy.  Frederick Law Olmsted laid out the arboretum as a part of Boston’s “Emerald Necklace” park system 20 years after he and Calvert Vaux designed New York’s Central Park.  The pleasant curvilinear pathways provide a boundless variety of unexpected views as you stroll the trails.

    Funding for Harvard’s purchase of the land came from James Arnold, who made his living from the ocean.  Arnold was a whaling magnate from New Bedford, who gave $100K to Harvard in his will for the establishment of an arboretum in 1868.  Charles Sprague Sargent was the first director of the Arboretum, serving until his death in the year after Route 1 was established (1927/1926).  Sargent and Olmsted worked together on the design of the road and trail system.

    The original Route 1 passed by the entrance gate of Arnold Arboretum, and continued up the 7 mile long “Emerald Necklace” on its way to Storrow Drive and Memorial Drive on the banks of the Charles River.

    But the Arboretum is not just a pretty place to visit.  It is a repository of plant specimens that is recognized as an important resource around the world.  Since inception, the Arboretum has helped to explore. catalog, and research plants worldwide, augmenting our understanding of botany.  Even this Yale man gives Harvard a hearty huzzah for running this place!

    The Arnold Arboretum is not an ivory tower kind of place, either.  It is open to the public without cost and is co-managed with the City of Boston, which annexed Jamaica Plain (West Roxbury) in 1873.  Its entrances open directly onto residential streets in the Roslindale and Stonybrook neighborhoods.  They offer walking tours in English and Spanish on weekends and host family-oriented activities in the Arboretum in fair weather.

    In short, Arnold Arboretum is an idyllic place for families, dog walkers, lovers, nature enthusiasts, runners, bicyclists, birders and photographers to enjoy a few hours in the beautiful outdoors.

    Peter Evans MA Boston Oct 10, 2023 Museums Nature Parks

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    Location: Boston, MA

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    Peter Evans
    Oct 10, 2023
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