38°33′55″N 121°25′42″W / 38.56539°N 121.4284°W / 38.56539; -121.4284

University Arboretum
Type

The University Arboretum is the arboretum and botanic garden of the California State University, Sacramento at 6000 J Street, Sacramento, California, at J Street and Carlson Drive.[1]

Founded in 1945 on what used to be a pear orchard and hop ranch,[1] the arboretum was originally named the Charles M. Goethe Arboretum in honor of Charles Goethe (1875–1966, pronounced "geh-teh"), a land developer, philanthropist, conservationist, eugenicist, and one of the university's founding fathers. "The name was changed without fanfare to University Arboretum in 2005" because of renewed attention to Goethe's virulently racist views, praise of Nazi Germany, and advocacy of eugenics.[1][2][3]

Located on a 3-acre (12,000-sq m) site, the arboretum is open daily from dawn to dusk and has some 1200 trees.[1] Of particular interest is a wide-ranging conifer collection as well as several rare plants, including Taiwania and the "living fossil" Wollemia.[1] The arboretum has a "Jurassic Park" section with flowering plants species dating back to the age of dinosaurs and another section for California native plants, with some 50 different species represented.[1]

Mike Baad, a retired professor who volunteered at the arboretum since he joined the university in 1969, is the University Arboretum's longtime director.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Debbie Arrington, Sacramento State's arboretum is hidden in plain sight (June 2, 2012). Sacramento Bee.
  2. "The Goethe Legacy at CSUS, California State University, Sacramento.
  3. Chrisanne Beckner, Darkness on the edge of campus: University’s philanthropic 'godfather' was mad about eugenics Archived 2005-04-08 at the Wayback Machine (February 19, 2004), Sacramento News & Review.
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