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The Monticello flower garden is composed of two elements: twenty oval beds immediately around the house and the winding flower border that encircles the West Lawn. Although there were earlier references to the flower "borders," it was not until 1807, when Thomas Jefferson began to anticipate his retirement from the presidency, that the flower gardens began to take their final shape. Jefferson sketched a plan for the twenty oval-shaped flower beds in the four corners or "angles" of the house. Each bed was planted with a different flower. Most of the seeds and bulbs were forwarded from Bernard McMahon, a Philadelphia nurseryman, author of The American Gardener's Calendar, and in many ways, Jefferson's gardening mentor.

Although there were later notations about plantings in the oval beds in Jefferson's Garden Book, a remarkable diary detailing a lifetime of horticulture at Monticello, the 1807 plan was the most complete.3 The diversity of flower species he recorded represents the scope of his interests. Many of the flowers were grown for centuries in Europe and were commonly cultivated in early American gardens, such as roses, Sweet William, and the double white-flowering poppy. Others were curiosities to European-Americans, such as the winter cherry, with its lantern-like fruits, and the blackberry lily.

Flowering twinleaf plant

One bed was planted with twinleaf (Jeffersonia diphylla, shown at right), a rare, woodland wildflower that was named in Jefferson's honor in 1792 by Benjamin Barton. Barton was a noted early American botanist. His tribute was inspired by Jefferson's "knowledge of natural history ... especially in botany and zoology [which] is equalled [sic]by that of few persons in the United-States."4 Other North American native plants cultivated in 1807 included the "Columbian lily" (Fritillaria pudica), collected by the Jefferson-sponsored Lewis and Clark expedition, and the cardinal flower, which could be found along the Rivanna River at the base of Monticello mountain. A quarter of the flowers cultivated at Monticello were from North American, and the gardens became, in part, a museum of "New World" botanical curiosities.

Tulips, hyacinths, and anemones were among the flowering bulbs planted in 1807. Perhaps because they were so easily shipped long distances, bulbs played a significant role at Monticello. The tulip, for example, was the most commonly mentioned flower in Jefferson's Garden Book. Many of these bulbs were "florist's flowers," species highly refined through selective breeding by skilled European gardeners.

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Planting History at Home

Many of the historic flower and plant varieties grown in the oval flower beds today, and recorded by Thomas Jefferson, are also propagated through the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants (CHP).

Visitors to Monticello can find plants and seeds for sale at the museum shop at the visitor center, or join us for fall and spring plant sales at CHP. Year-round shopping is available at the Monticello Shop online, including bare root plants, seeds, and gardening accessories.