Missouri Botanical Garden
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William L. Brown Center (WLBC)

 

THE ORCHID COLLECTION

The Missouri Botanical Garden has a long and proud history of involvement with orchids. The first specimens were given to Henry Shaw in 1876 by Mrs. Henry T. Blow. Her collection was the result of plants collected in Brazil by her husband while he served as Minister to Brazil under President Grant. The collection grew steadily until 1918, when the largest public display of orchids ever held in St. Louis was made at the Christmas Show. Limited by today’s standards, the show was billed as an “orchid collection which excels all in the United States.”

Just two years later came the flowering of the first hybrid developed here at the Garden. It was a Paphiopedilum hybrid, the first of many. In 1923, G.H. Pring of the Missouri Botanical Garden staff set off to Panama and Colombia on a trip to collect orchids and other economic plants. He returned with 5,000 cattleyas, clearly a successful trip. In 1926, the Garden established a tropical field station in Panama with the cooperation of the Canal Zone Government. Orchid collection began in earnest.

By 1926, orchids at the Garden were being threatened by the industrial smoke and smog of the city, so the orchid collection was moved to the newly acquired Shaw Arboretum at Gray Summit, Missouri, 30 miles outside of St. Louis. They were placed in a range of greenhouses built especially to house the collection. In 1927, an orchid seedling department was begun.

Through gifts and collecting, the orchid collection grew in size and prominence. In 1954, St. Louis was the site of the first World Orchid Congress. By 1958, conditions in the city had improved to the point that the orchid collection was returned to the Garden.

Today, the Missouri Botanical Garden’s orchid collection still represents one of the largest and finest in the United States. The Garden has over 8,000 orchid plants, representing approximately 280 genera. The collection includes over 2,500 unique orchid taxa.

Emphasis has been placed on the most extensive genera Cattleya, Laelia, Epidendrum, Oncidium, and Paphiopedilum because they can survive the blistering St. Louis summers, and offer a diversity of color and form that are valuable assets for displays and educational exhibits.

Orchids can be viewed in the atrium of the Beaumont Room in the Ridgway Visitor Center and in rotating Climatron® conservatory orchid displays. In addition, the Garden holds an annual orchid show from late January through mid-March in the Orthwein Floral Display Hall of the Ridgway Visitor Center.


The Missouri Botanical Garden’s mission is “to discover and share knowledge about plants and their environment, in order to preserve and enrich life.”  Today, 150 years after opening, the Missouri Botanical Garden is a National Historic Landmark and a center for science and conservation, education and horticultural display.

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