Early years (1876–1915) W. Atlee Burpee & Company was founded in 1876 by
Washington Atlee Burpee in
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, after starting a mail-order chicken business in 1876. The company expanded to selling garden seeds, farm supplies, tools and hogs after customers began asking for seeds they had grown in their native farms. In 1888, the family farm,
Fordhook Farm in
Doylestown, Pennsylvania, was established as a family farm and crop field trials after Burpee began traveling to Europe to collect seeds which needed to be adapted to North American climates. The farm was likely the first experimental test field station in the United States. In 1900, distant cousin
Luther Burbank visited the farm inspiring him to create his own experiments. He later created additional research stations, including in California in 1909, to test seeds. By the turn of the century, Burpee's had created one of the largest mail and freight businesses of the time. File:Burpee's farm annual - garden, farm, and flower seeds, thoroughbred stock (1884) (20501247072).jpg|W. Atlee Burpee & Co. (1884) File:Burpee's farm annual 1893 (1893) (20501427622).jpg|Seed warehouse operations (1893) File:Burpee's Farm Annual 1886 front cover.jpg|Burpee's farm annual (1886) File:1901BurpeeCatalog.jpg|Burpee seed catalog (1901)
Expanding the company (1915–1970) at the W. Atlee Burpee company in 1943 The direction of the company began to change with the death of its founder in 1915, when his son,
David Burpee, inherited the company. David was interested in
victory gardens and was an early promoter of the concept during
World War I. He also prioritized flowers and initiated several flower
hybridization breeding programs. Geneticists also began to modify the genes of seeds using X-rays and
colchicine. After Burbank's death in 1926, Burpee acquired the rights to his experiments but no notable vegetables or flowers were to come from Burbank's work. In 1974, Burpee moved from its north
Philadelphia location to its current headquarters at 300 Park Avenue in
Warminster, Pennsylvania.
SEPTA extended its
Warminster Line commuter rail to Warminster, the train station being opposite Park Avenue from Burpee's headquarters. In the 70s, the company introduced seed-starting kits for beginners, an innovation in the seed industry. In 1981, experimentation and seed production left Fordhook Farm. In March 2019, James Mattikow was named the company's president and CEO. ==White marigold==