Inside The New York Botanical Garden
Goldenrod
Posted in Around the Garden, Photography on September 20 2013, by Matt Newman
Had Jason and his Argonauts come upon this goldenrod in their search for the actual fleece, I’m not sure they would have been fooled. Though I doubt they’d be disappointed in its brightness, either.
Solidage sphacelata ‘Golden Fleece’ — Photo by Ivo M. Vermeulen
Posted in From the Library on October 18 2011, by Mertz Library
Thomas Alva Edison died on October 18, 1931–eighty years ago today.
In the late 1920s, Edison was deeply engaged in plant research. His goal was to discover a domestic source of rubber, a plant that might produce better material than what was available at the time. (The plant turned out to be goldenrod.)
This effort was spearheaded by the Edison Botanical Corporation and funded by Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone. Research was done by the corporation and by Edison himself at The New York Botanical Garden as well as at Edison’s labs in West Orange, N.J. and Fort Myers, Florida. The great inventor spent several years periodically working at the Garden and its Library, along with assistants John Kunkel Small, Barukh Jonas, William H. Meadowcroft, and others.
Learn more about Thomas A. Edison's research at the Garden below.