All listed sizes available for pre-order until March 15th. Quantities may become limited as the season gets underway.
Sizes - Availability - Price
4 Inch Pots - Pre-Order Available - $5.00
Quart Pots - Pre-Order Available - $8.00
1 Gallon Pot - Coming Fall 2026 - $12.00
Height - 5 Feet
Light Needs - Part Shade / Full Shade
Soil Preferences - Clay/Loam/Sand
Moisture Range - Wet-Medium
Advantages - Home Garden Favorite / Pollinator Specialist / Supports Birds
Deer Resistance - Yes
Bloom Time - July-October
Bloom Color - Blue/Purple
Root Type - Fibrous
Growth Habit - Re-Seeder
Plant Profile
American Bellflower - (Campanula americana) is an erect, annual or biennial wildflower native to moist open woods, moist meadows, streambanks, and ditches in shady areas of eastern and central North America. It grows 2 to 5 feet tall on an unbranched light green central stem. The leaves are medium to dark green, and the flowers appear solitary or in clusters of light to dark violet-blue blooms, present from mid-summer to early fall.
It is best grown in rich, moist, well-drained soils in partial shade. They will tolerate more sun in areas that have cooler summers, but they prefer afternoon shade in hot summer climates. This bellflower will readily reseed itself in the garden and is good for naturalizing. It is a pollinator magnet that will attract many species of bees, wasps, butterflies, and hummingbirds, all searching for nectar and pollen.
As a biennial plant it will produce a basal rosette of leaves in its first year. The following year, the stems grow erect from the basal rosette and ascend 6 feet with rough, lance-shaped, green leaves. The flowers are light blue with a pale white ring at the throat. They are flat, 5-lobed, star-shaped, and may appear solitary or in clusters at the leaf axils. Seed capsules replace the spent flowers.
The American bellflower will thrive in a moist and shaded woodland where it can naturalize. Mass plantings are suggested.
Highly Important Host
(3 or fewer types of host plants for species)
N/A
Generally Important Host
(4 or more host plants for species)
Mouse-Colored Pyrophila
Mouse-Colored Pyrophila