The Edinburgh
botanic garden was founded in 1670 at St. Anne's Yard, near
Holyrood Palace, by
Robert Sibbald and
Andrew Balfour. It is the second oldest botanic garden in the UK after
Oxford's. The plant collection used as the basis of the garden was the private collection of
Sir Patrick Murray, 2nd Lord Elibank, moved from his home at Livingston Peel in 1672 following his death in September 1671. The original site was "obtained of John Brown, gardener of the North Yardes in the Holyrood Abby, an inclosure of some 40 foot of measure every way. By what we procured from Levingstone and other gardens, we made a collection of eight or nine hundred plants yr." This site proved too small, and in 1676 grounds belonging to
Trinity Hospital were leased by Balfour from the City Council: this second garden was sited just to the east of the
Nor Loch, down from the High Street. In the spring of 1689, for certain strategic military reasons, the
Nor Loch which lay west of the Physic Garden was drained, resulting in the flooding of the garden (which at this stage had wholly relocated to the Trinity Hospital site), with much mud and general rubbish being deposited, to the ruination of many of the plants. Partly for this reason and partly due to necessary expansion the facility relocated to the Holyrood site in 1695.
John Ainslie's 1804 map shows it as the "Old Physick Garden" to the east of the
North Bridge. The site was subsequently occupied by tracks of the
North British Railway, and a plaque at platform 11 of the
Waverley railway station marks its location. In 1763, the garden's collections were moved away from the city's pollution to a larger (five acre) "Physick Garden" on the west side of
Leith Walk, covering the area now called
Bellevue, all under the control of
Prof John Hope. This site is shown in Ainslie's 1804 map. The site is today known as Hopetoun Crescent Gardens and is one of the collection of
New Town Gardens. Some time prior to Hope's death (1786) he was brought Turkish
rhubarb seeds by
Bruce of Kinnaird and this was the first rhubarb grown in Great Britain. As this proved successful over 3000 plants were grown as rhubarb was previously an expensive import (used as a medicine). A cottage from the garden's original site remained on Leith Walk for over one hundred years. In 2008, the building was moved brick by brick to a site within the current gardens. The project was completed in 2016. The garden was a popular destination for botanists and supplied plants to other gardens such as
Kew. Hope erected a monument to
Carl Linnaeus on the site in 1778. In the early 1820s under the direction of the Curator, William McNab, the garden moved west to its present location (adjacent to Inverleith Row), and the Leith Walk site was built over between Hopetoun Crescent and Haddington Place. The Temperate Palm House, which remains the tallest in Scotland, was built in 1858. In 1877, the city acquired
Inverleith House from the estate of
Cosmo Innes and added it to the existing gardens, opening the remodelled grounds to the public in 1881. The botanic garden at
Benmore became the first Regional Garden of the RBGE in 1929. It was followed by the gardens at
Logan and
Dawyck in 1969 and 1978. At present: The RBGE is creating a digital record of its renowned Herbarium collection of over three million preserved plant specimens from 157 countries. Historically hard to access, it is now being digitised into high-resolution images that can be viewed by anyone with an internet connection. The digitised platform now sees requests come in from across the globe from students, scientists and plant enthusiasts. The one millionth specimen to be digitised was Stereocaulon vesuvianum, a species of lichen collected from Ben Nevis in 2021. RBGE lichenologist Dr Rebecca Yahr, who collected the specimen during a climb up Scotland's tallest mountain, said: "Celebrating the milestone with this important specimen is an exciting opportunity for us to highlight Scotland's unique biodiversity and extend RBGE's mission to research and understand lichens more generally." ==Notable staff and residents==