The John Innes Horticultural Institution was founded in 1910 at
Merton Park, Surrey (now
London Borough of Merton), with funds bequeathed by
John Innes, a merchant and philanthropist. The Institution occupied Innes's former estate at Merton Park, Surrey until 1945 when it moved to
Bayfordbury, Hertfordshire. It moved to its present site in 1967. In 1910,
William Bateson became the first director of the John Innes Horticultural Institution and moved with his family to Merton Park.
John Innes compost was developed by the institution in the 1930s, who donated the recipe to the "
Dig for Victory" war effort. The John Innes Centre has never sold John Innes compost. During the 1980s, the administration of the John Innes Institute was combined with that of the
Plant Breeding Institute (formerly at
Trumpington, Cambridgeshire) and the Nitrogen Fixation Laboratory. In 1994, following the relocation of the operations of other two organisations to the Norwich site, the three were merged as the John Innes Centre. The John Innes Centre has a tradition of training PhD students and post-docs. PhD degrees obtained via the John Innes Centre are awarded by the
University of East Anglia. The John Innes Centre has a contingent of
postdoctoral researchers, many of whom are recruited onto the institute's Post-doctoral Training Fellowship programme. The John Innes Centre also sponsors seminars and lectures, including the
Bateson Lecture,
Biffen Lecture,
Chatt Lecture,
Darlington Lecture and
Haldane Lecture. In February 2025, the John Innes Centre announced the appointment of Professor Cristóbal Uauy who became director in September 2025. ==Research==