The favorite flowers of the founding fathers

From tulips to wild roses, here are the beloved plants that caught the eyes of the nation's first leaders.

Tulip garden.
Tulip garden.
Kybele | Adobe Stock

If you’re curious about the early gardens of America, look no further. Flower Power Daily has rounded up some of the floral favorites of America’s early leaders. Per the article:

In honor of Independence Day, we thought of looking at the Founding Fathers and how they spent time in their gardens.

Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and Alexander Hamilton were farmers, as were most men of their time – even if they became soldiers, lawyers and statesmen. Benjamin Franklin, seated at center in the above painting of the Second Continental Congress, was a scientist with a deep interest in seeds as a source of American self-sufficiency. John Jay, who was president of the Congress and navigated many essential treaties, retired to life as a gentleman farmer in Westchester.

They were knowledgeable about plants, including flowers, and four of them knew the Philadelphia botanist John Bartram and ordered plants from him. Outside of their occupation of the White House and higher reaches of public service, each of them had farms or estates with flower gardens. In Franklin’s case, it was the garden behind his townhouse in Philadelphia, perhaps best known for his mulberry tree, under which details of the Constitution were hashed out.

Continue to the full article here.