John J. Tyler Arboretum

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John J. Tyler Arboretum
(U.S. Registered Historic District)
The Tyler Arboretum entrance sign
The Tyler Arboretum entrance sign
Location: Lima, Pennsylvania
Area: 650 acres
Built/Founded: 1710
Architect: McGoodwine, Robert Rodes
Architectural style(s): Georgian, Gothic Revival
Added to NRHP: February 27, 2003
NRHP Reference#: 03000080[1]
Governing body: State
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John J. Tyler Arboretum is a nonprofit arboretum located at 515 Painter Road, Media, Pennsylvania. It is open daily except for major holidays; an admission fee is charged to non-members.

The property's history began in 1681, when William Penn signed a "lease and release" agreement with Thomas Minshall, an English Quaker, for property in Pennsylvania that contained the site now occupied by the arboretum. Between 1681 and 1944, the property was home to eight generations of the same family. The arboretum itself started in 1825 when two brothers, Jacob and Minshall Painter, set aside land to systematically plant more than 1,000 varieties of trees and shrubs. In 1944, descendant Laura Tyler bequeathed the property, in memorial to her husband John J. Tyler, to be a nonprofit arboretum.

Today the arboretum contains the following major features:

  • Native Woodland Walk (begun in 1970)
  • Meadow Maze, a recent four-ring labyrinth of meadow grasses based on a classical seven-ringed design
  • Uncultivated land (180 ha / 450 acres) that remain natural and contain 32 km / 20 miles of marked trails.

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[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2007-01-23).