The H. H. Hunnewell Arboretum is home to native and non-native trees grouped by different habitats, with understory and herbaceous layers to support wildlife.

Featured areas

This naturalistic and topographically diverse half of the outdoor gardens includes several prominent features.

Stone steps lead into the Kettle, named for the geological feature formed by glaciers that causes this bowl-like land form.

The Arboretum Pool lies at the base of the woodland edge of the Kettle, surrounded by lush ferns, and acts as a vernal pool supporting amphibians such as frogs and salamanders.

Azalea Hill is a favorite spot, especially when it blooms in spring with vivid pinks, oranges, and purples from lilacs, azaleas, and understory flowers.

Adventure into the Cedar Knoll for a meditative woodland trail, perfect for forest bathing, the practice of Shinrin-yoku.

The Bird Refuge is a section of woods where you might spot owls and hawks, woodpeckers, and other fauna enjoying a relatively undisturbed forest area.

Find the stone bench memorializing Professor Margaret Ferguson, who enjoyed the vista from this point in the arboretum.

The Arboretum incorporates numerous members of the Ericaceae (Heath) family: rhododendrons and azaleas (Rhododendron spp), andromeda (Pieris japonica), mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) and dog-hobble (Leucothoe fontanesiana). Among the notable trees are Fraser fir (Abies fraseri), Franklin tree (Franklinia alatamaha), Japanese maple (Acer palmatum), eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), pitch pine (Pinus rigida) and sawara falsecypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera). The upland woods at the east end of the arboretum is a fragment of the type of mixed oak forest one is likely to find in eastern Massachusetts.

History

The arboretum takes its name from Horatio Hollis Hunnewell (1810-1902), a prominent member of the philanthropic Hunnewell family. An avid horticulturist, H. H. Hunnewell popularized and cultivated cold-hardy rhododendrons and donated many to the college. His estate on Lake Waban, dating from 1852, is home to world-famous gardens of his creation, including a pinetum of rare conifers. Mr. Hunnewell and his family have been ardent supporters of Wellesley College through the years. His wife was Isabella Pratt Welles, for whose family the college and town were named. Funds for the arboretum came from his daughter, Isabella Hunnewell Shaw, who wished to share her own childhood enjoyment of the woods with students of the college.