Golden Gate Rose Garden, San Francisco — Visitor Guide & Things to Do Nearby
À propos Golden Gate Rose Garden
San Francisco went without a municipal rose garden until January 8, 1961, when the Golden Gate Rose Garden was finally dedicated in Golden Gate Park. The garden was designed by Parks Superintendent Roy Hudson and created to honor John McLaren, the legendary "father of Golden Gate Park," using his favorite flower as the tribute.
The story behind the garden began in the Sunset District at the home of George McDonough, where the first San Francisco Rose Society meeting was held on December 7, 1941, the same day as the attack on Pearl Harbor. Despite that inauspicious beginning, the society grew and eventually partnered with the American Rose Society to establish a testing site for trial rose varieties in Golden Gate Park.
Today the garden holds over 850 varieties of roses, including hybrid tea, floribunda, and grandiflora types. Peak bloom runs from mid-May through summer, when the colors and fragrance can be almost overwhelming.
The garden is one of those Golden Gate Park treasures that rewards visitors who venture beyond the main attractions. Tucked away from the busier museum area, it offers a peaceful retreat where you can wander among hundreds of labeled varieties and learn the names of roses you have admired without knowing what they were called.
A Questo quest through Golden Gate Park can lead you to the rose garden as a fragrant interlude between the park's bigger landmarks, adding a moment of beauty to the adventure.
Plan Your Visit
- Address
- 425 John F Kennedy Dr, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA
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Golden Gate Rose GardenQuest starting points
