Burrage was widely known as a cultivator of rare
orchids. A 1932 memorial in
The Bulletin of the American Orchid Society stated, "No person has done more to encourage the study and cultivation of Orchids than Mr. Burrage." The
Massachusetts Horticultural Society awarded him the George R. White Medal of Honor in 1922 for establishing an outstanding collection of exotic orchids in
Beverly, Massachusetts. In 1925 he received the Lindley Medal from the
Royal Horticultural Society of England for an exhibition of
Cypripediums displayed in a natural setting at the
Chelsea Flower Show in London. He was elected president of the
Massachusetts Horticultural Society in 1921 and became founding president of the
American Orchid Society (AOS) the same year. He served as president of the AOS for eight years until his health declined. He was a Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society of England and a member of the Horticultural Society of New York, the
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society and
The Garden Club of America. The
nothogenus × Burrageara of the orchid family is named for Albert Burrage. ==Properties and philanthropy==