Sister Mary Clare Metz: Faith and Flora
While digitizing specimens for the Texas and Oklahoma Regional Consortium of Herbaria,…
Women in Science
While digitizing specimens for the Texas and Oklahoma Regional Consortium of Herbaria,…
When the Garden began a series of expeditions to the Caribbean during…
Elizabeth Knight Britton’s grandfather James Knight owned a sugar plantation and a…
Elizabeth Gertrude Knight Britton’s career as a bryologist and her central role…
Elizabeth Knight Britton went on to complete her schooling at the Normal…
Catherine Furbish was born in 1834 in Exeter, New Hampshire. From an…
Highly respected among her male peers in the 18th century, Jane Colden…
Mary Agnes Chase was a self educated, determined, and influential botanist. Early…
What's in a name?Women in Science
For as long as we've been using binomial nomenclature to name species,…
The NYBG herbarium has over two thousand specimens that are labeled as collected…
Specimen StoriesWomen in Science
Tucked away in an office drawer of NYBG’s Fern Curator, Robbin Moran,…
Between 1805 and 1813, in Ballylickey on the shores of Bantry Bay,…
See more of Ellen Hutchin's beautifully detailed marine algae collections.
Violetta Susan Elizabeth White Delafield (1875–1949) was a promising young mycologist at the…
CollectorsWomen in ScienceExpeditions
Jeanne Baret was the first woman ever to circumnavigate the globe, but…
Frances Horne was an academic, an artist and a botanist. She earned her…
Sara Plummer met John Gill Lemmon in 1876 when he came to…