The Wild Flower Preservation Society of America is a defunct American non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of native plants.
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Formation | 1902; 120 years ago (1902) |
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Dissolved | 1933; 89 years ago (1933) |
Type | Non-profit organization |
Purpose | Plant conservation |
Region | United States |
The Wild Flower Preservation Society of America was organized in 1902, using funds from a gift of $3000 from Olivia Stokes and Caroline Phelps Stokes to the New York Botanical Garden.[1][2] The first meeting was held on April 23, 1902; Frederick Vernon Coville was elected president, Charles Louis Pollard was elected secretary, and Elizabeth Gertrude Britton was elected to the Board of Managers.[3][4] Other members of the board included Charles Edwin Bessey, Liberty Hyde Bailey, William Trelease, Charles Frederick Millspaugh, and Alice Eastwood.[3] The Society established numerous local chapters.[4] It was incorporated in the state of New York in 1915.[1]
For a time, the Society published The Plant World,[5] a journal that began publication in 1897.
By 1924, the scope of this formerly national organization was limited to New York.[1]