Tuesday, February 17, 2015

A Good Read: Love Stories Riddle the Prince Family Nursery History

This marvelously agreeable history of the Prince Nursery of Flushing, New York  written in 1917 by Margaret L. Farrand was too hard to read from the Google scan so I am recreating it here from the OCR copy.  I think I have unraveled it fairly well, filling in missing text and  adding spacing for easier online reading, plus additional images just for fun.


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IN the busiest section of the little town of Flushing, Long Island, there is an oasis of green terraces, blossoming trees and a picturesque old white house so beautifully incongruous with its surroundings that it is impossible to pass it by without a second glance and a great deal of pleasantly aroused curiosity.    Trolley cars clang all about it, the street from which its terraces rise is noisy and none too clean, but nothing seems to disturb the old Prince place.    It dreams on pleasantly and peacefully. There is much dignity but no scorn about it; it has too many agreeable memories with which to occupy its time. 

Today the place consists of the charming old house and about six acres of grounds. Fifty years ago there were eighty acres, and it was the most important nursery in the country.
Four generations of Princes were nurserymen. William Robert, the greatest of them all, died in 1869.
 "The first of the American Princes, Robert, was one of the Huguenots who settled at New Rochelle and on the north shore of Long Island, bringing with them a great number of French fruits and the love of French people for horticulture. The nursery, one of the first, and certainly the most important one in America at this time, grew rapidly until the Revolutionary War. The establishment was of such public importance that during a part of the war the British placed a guard over it to protect it from depredation."  
 Thus the report of the New York Agricultural Experiment Station for the year 1910, which omits to mention that a daughter of the household, patriotic American though she was, lost her heart to the major in command of the British troops and that, when the war was over, they lived happily ever after.   Many of the British officers purchased plants and trees from the nursery to send to their friends in England. International connections were established in this way, and after the war business flourished.
In those days the Princes lived in an interesting old house—now, alas! torn down to make way for the railroad—which stood close to the present place. It was in 1826 that the present place— the house was old even then—was purchased for William Robert Prince and his bride. Their story is one of the prettiest of the nursery's romances.
[graphic]
Governor Collins, of Rhode Island, and his charming daughter were making a visit to New York. The good governor derived most of his income from a coffee plantation in Cuba, which would one day descend to his daughter.
 Being a man of advanced ideas he believed that it would be an excellent thing
for his child to have some knowledge of the plant from which her income grew, so they made a visit to the famous  
Prince nurseries. Young William Robert, then in partnership with his father, showed them through the African and Asiatic greenhouse, but it is doubtful whether Miss Collins learned much about coffee at that time, for she and Mr. Prince fell in love at first sight.
The nursery was also responsible for the romance of William Robert's sister, Mary Ann.
Mr. Thomas Mitchell, a young botanist, from Virginia, spent a summer in Mexico and, on his return, sent a valuable collection of plants to the Linnaean Garden as the place in America where they would be most appreciated and best cared for. William Prince, pleased by the compliment, invited the young man to stay with him when next he visited New York. Mr. Mitchell not only accepted the invitation but promptly fell in love with and, in due course, married Miss Mary Ann Prince.
It was a delightful house to which William Robert Prince brought his bride, solidly built in good Colonial style, clapboards without and stout oak timbers within. It has not been made over nor altered, but stands today just as it did a century and more ago. A wide hall runs straight through the house, with two large, well-proportioned rooms on either side. The kitchen is in an ell on the east.
There are four particularly interesting things about the hall: the gooseneck mahogany stair-rail; the solid oak door, divided in the Dutch manner; the bust of Linnaeus on a bracket against the wall; and the pictures of the front and back gardens which one sees when the door stand open.

The bust of Linnaus is not so much an artistic as a botanical treasure. Linnaeus was the patron saint of the nursery. William Prince, the second proprietor, named it in his honor the Linneean Botanic Garden and Nursery.  William Prince, the third proprietor, who established the first steamboats between Flushing and New York, named one of them Linnaeus. In 1823, when a great celebration was held in Flushing, to do honor to the nursery and the men who had made it, and DeWitt Clinton made an address, the bust of Linnaeus was crowned with laurel. Now it occupies a place of honor near the front door of the house.
(This is a cameo of Linnaeus by Josiah Wedgewood.  While not referred to in this article I think it is too nice to leave out.)
When the upper half of that front door is swung back you look across the narrow porch, which runs the width of the house, into the pink-and-white blossoms of a tall magnolia tree—that is, if you are lucky enough to see the place in early spring. 

At a little distance from the magnolia, two box trees meet across the walk, half hiding the house from the street, and beyond the box trees you can see the fan-shaped leaves of a salisburia, or Japanese ginkgo tree, the oldest one in the country.

 William Robert Prince introduced to America nearly all the Japanese trees we know. As soon as Perry opened the door of Japan, the Flushing nurseries began to bring out trees. Long before that they had been importing trees from China: the oldest Chinese magnolia in America stands close to the back door of the house. 

The European trade was chiefly with France. William Prince, second, imported the first Lombardy poplars. The oldest cedar of Lebanon in America, a magnificent tree, stands on the west side of the house, and in the grounds arc the oldest Mt. Atlas cedars, paulownias and purple beeches in the country.
The Princes were always on the alert for some new thing in the plant world. If a new plant was produced in Europe, they had it in the Linnaean Garden the next year. They conducted most of the trade in trees, plants and bulbs between the United States and Europe. They sent trees and shrubs all over this country, particularly to the southern states, because, thanks to theGulf Stream, the Long Island climate is somewhat like that in the South. William Robert Prince was much interested in the native silk industries and had huge plantations of mulberries in many cities. He promoted mulberry culture to such an extent that at one time the slips of the Chinese mulberry passed currency in Flushing stores at the rate of twelve and one-half cents.
But the Princes always put more stress on the scientific than on the commercial side of their business. Many valuable botanical collections were entrusted to their care; most interesting of all, perhaps, the specimens brought back by the Lewis and Clark expedition.
William Robert Prince botanized all over the Atlantic States with Professor Torrey of Columbia and Professor Nuttall of Harvard. It was from a trip to the West that he brought back the first California poppies that the East had ever seen. The Linnaean Garden was full of rare and interesting specimens of trees and plants.



nursery catalogue of 1771, when "any person having mind for any of the above trees, 
and choose to have them sent to New York,
 
they can have them sent 
on Tuesday and Friday of every week, as there is boat that goes constantly from Flushing to New York on them days"


The greatest of the Princes' claims to fame, however, lies in their writings. Their trade catalogues from 1815 to 1850 rank among the standard publications of horticulture. Mrs. Henry, the daughter of William Robert Prince, tells of the rapt expression with which her father used to taste berries and fruits, trying to catch and to put into words the exact and distinctive flavor of each one, in order to list it in his trade catalogue.

 William Prince, the third proprietor of the nursery, wrote in 1828 a Treatise on Horticulture, the first work of its kind produced in America. William Robert Prince was the Liberty H. Bailey of his day. Besides contributing all through his life to the horticultural press, he wrote three books which not only rank high among those of his time but are held in great esteem by modern horticulturists. The nineteenth century turned to them as the twentieth century turns to the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. These are a Treatise on the Vine, Manual of Roses and a Pomological Manual. Vigor, accuracy and a perfect knowledge of French are the distinguishing characteristics of his style.
A passage in the preface to the Pomological Manual gives an interesting statement of William Robert Prince's attitude toward his work. It was not a business, but a science, almost a religion.
"The studies of nature have been wisely ordained by Omnipotence as the most pleasing to the mind of man; and it is in the unbounded field which natural objects present, that he finds that enjoyment which their never-ending novelty is peculiarly calculated to impart, and which renders their study devoid of that satiety which attaches itself to other pursuits. Most wisely has it been thus prescribed that, by an occupation of the mind in itself inviting and recreative, we should be insensibly led on to a development of the intricacies of nature, and be thus taught to appreciate the beneficence of the Creator, by a knowledge of the perfection and beauty which mark the labors of his hand."  

"The establishment whence this work emanates is the oldest of the kind in our country, and it has from its commencement been the primary desire of its proprietors to preserve the utmost accuracy; in doing which, pecuniary considerations have been deemed a subject of but minor importance, their nurseries and garden being a family inheritance, in the high character and perpetuity of which they have not only enlisted their interest and welfare, but whose advancement, as a great national institution, has been made a particular object of their feelings and pride."  (Phew!)

In view of the recent publication by the American Joint Committee on Horticultural Nomenclature of the 1917 Official Code of Standardized Plant Names, it is interesting to read Mr. Prince's thoughts on the subject in 1832.   
    
"It has long been a received opinion among a portion of the public, that the proprietors of nurseries prefer to perpetuate a plurality of names for the same fruit, and are not desirous to reduce the nomenclature to a correct basis, but find an advantage in the confusion that exists.  

This opinion has gained credence from the circumstance that the same fruit is cultivated in some nurseries under two, three or more names;but as erroneous a practice is most generally attributed to the ignorance of the proprietor, and seldom arises from an intention to deceive,  the opinion referred to is not supported by the premises.

It must, however, be acknowledged as a correct position that the proprietor of a nursery ought invariably to possess a full knowledge of the qualities and peculiarities of the respective varieties of which he cultivates."
 




The oldest cedar of Lebanon in America came from France 

so long ago that no one remembers tbe date

Mr. Prince's writings were the result of direct, personal observation and experiment in the nursery.  Every inch of the eighty acres in the Linnaean Garden was used for botanical purposes.  The ground was held so precious that the family were not allows even enough space to raise vegetables for their own table.  Mr.Prince never did any of the work with his own hands, but directed everything, watched and examined everything, planned, thought, wrote.  In his day the Linnaean garden did for the country the work the Department of Agriculture is doing now.

William  Robert Prince died in 1869.  Since then most of the nursery has been sold, but the old house and six acres of delightful grounds are still preserved by the family.  There are two children now living: L. Bradford Prince, governor of New Mexico, who carries on family traditions spending his spare moments on his western fruit ranch; and Mrs. C.C. Henry, of Flushing, who tells in the most delightful manner the history and romances of the nursery.

Close to the back door of the house is the oldest Chinese magnolia in the country. It owes its size to grafting with American stock.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Long Red Studley and the 1834 Wm.Prince Seed Catalog

Recommended Selection of Vegetables from 1835; 1834 Wm.Prince  Seed Catalog


I just found this sitting in drafts.  Since I recently did a post from 1873 on recommended vegetables I might as well carry on the theme.  There is a pleasant contrariness to writing about vegetable gardens while snow fall and the weather man goes on about Blizzard Warnings.

In the following article I particularly like the spelling variations, such as "turneps".   That was probably a printer error, as Prince's 1834 catalog lists Turnips!  
And it is hard to beat a name like "Long Red Studley"!!  

(Oh, bummer...reading the original catalog it is the carrot Long Red, Studley, or Surrey.  Phooey, darn comma, that isn't funny at all. That typesetter must have done this job after lunch and a few beers too many.)

While linking the Wm.Prince & Sons below to a previous Prince page, I saw that I hadn't given much information on the formidable family of botanists and horticulturists.  They deserve more, and now I am curious why I stopped before! They listed their location on this catalog as "Flushing, near New-York"

(Studley Park was a fertile estate in Yorkshire that competed with success in the active Victorian horticultural shows...maybe that is the Studley?)



Selection of Vegetables for 1835
Mb. L. Tucker—We have been repeatedly asked to designate the finest varieties of vegetables, and we now enumerate some of the most desirable, and will do so with regard to others at a future opportunity.
Yours very respectfully,
Wm Prince Sons,  Linnean Botanic Garden, near N. Y., March 7,1835

Beet—Long Blood, Early Turnep Blood, Early Yellow Turnep, Early White Sugar.
Brocoli—Grange's Cape, Sulphur Colored, Purple Cape, and New Imperial Late Dwarf White.
Cauliflower—Early, and Half Hardy.
CabbageEarliest French, Early York, Early Royal Dwarf, Large York, French Oxheart, Early Emperor, Bonneuil, Harvest Battersea, Large Late Bergen, Early Savoy, Cape Savoy, Monstrous French Savoy, Large Pancalier Savoy, the latter extra fine and far surpassing the kinds of Savoy usually cultivated.
Carrot—Early Scarlet Hom, Altringham, Long Red Studley, and Large White.
Celery-Turkish Large White Solid, North's Giant Red, Dwarf Curled.
Cucumber—Early Long Frame, Long Green Prickly, Long Green Turkey, Early Green Cluster, and Long Green Southgate, for table, the latter longest of all; and the Small Green and Gherkin for pickles.
Endive—Italian Green Curled, and White Batavian.
Indian Corn—Early White Tuscarora, and Sweet or Sugar.
Lettuce—Early Curled Silesia, Large Early White French, Versailles, Turkish, and Red Edged Early White, as Head or Cabbage Lettuces for spring and summer towing; and Florence Coss, Magnum Bonum Coss, and Monstrous Coss, for loose, or less solid heads. The Coss Lettuces are deemed sweeter and more tender than the cabbage varieties.
Onion—Early Silver Skinned and Pale Red Madeira, are earliest of all, and sure to attain their size the first season. The Yellow Dutch, not quite as early, but produces very large onion the first season.
Melon—Pine Apple, Persian, Citron, Skillman's Netted, Minorca, Netted Romana, French Muscadc, Malta Winter, all of which arc green fleshed. The Cohansa, Imperial, Cyprian, Green Fleshed Sugar, Largo Yellow Cantaloup, and other Cantaloup varieties are also valuable.
Peas—Six Weeks, Washington, Dwarf Blue Imperial, Dwarf Green Marrow, Knight's Marrow, Woodford's Marrow, and various others.
PumpkinSpanish Cheese, Yellow Cheese, &c.
RadishEarliest French Scarlet, very tender and earliest of all, Mason's Scarlet Short Top, Salmon, and White Naples, as long varieties. The Scarlet, Violet and White Turnep varieties are best for early sowing, and the Yellow Turnep and Spanish varieties for hot seasons, or for tropical climates.
Squash—Summer Bush, Summer Crookneck Bush, Vegetable Marrow, and Italian, for early ; White Canada, Yellow Fall Crookneck, for autumn ; and Teneriff, Acoin, and Cocoanut, for winter.
Turnep—Early White, and Early Yellow Dutch, White Stone, Yellow Stone, &c, for spring sowing as garden varieties


To put the age of this 1834 Wm. Prince & Sons catalog into perspective, Prince still lists Tomatoes with the alternative name Love Apple. 

Under Indian Corn he lists a variety called Mottled Pearl.  I wonder if that is the old variety that has recently become the hot heritage variety that we currently call Gem.  The Gem kernels are pearlescent...Pearl is a better name.  Later: In another publication I found reference to "Mottled, or Curious Pearl" and I think they are pop corn, so the pearl refers to the round seed. This thought was backed up by another list from a 1835 Genesee Farmer where Pearl is Pop.

























Sunday, February 15, 2015

Winter Scene on Seedsman's Tradecard

Snowed another 6 inches last night, but we missed the coastal heavy snow!!  Poor Boston.

Anyway, this trade card caught my eye and I thought I would share it with you.

I wonder if Mr. Sibley gave out the cards during the season depicted.
I have found many cards online, and all the seasons are represented.
I assume he did as otherwise is silly.




I love detailed pictures of factory buildings. 
I think the little people are out of scale.  What do you think?


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Phantom Flowers and Skeleton Leaves

Front CoverToday I just wanted to share an interesting book I just came across a few minutes ago.



Phantom FlowersA Treatise on the Art of Producing Skeleton Leaves 

J.E. Tilton, 1864













Monday, February 9, 2015

"Then comes lettuce." Leads to Odd Illustrations of 19th C. Seed Farm Operation


"There's a host of good early kinds," said Mrs. Chose. 'Tennis Ball,' and ' Early Egg,' and ' White Silesia,' and ' Simpson.' Then for hot weather, 'Malta Drumhead' is good, and 'Neapolitan,' and 'Asiatic,' and the 'Cos' varieties. 'All the Year Round' has a name, but I haven't tried it."

Miss Tiller' Gets Advice: Ideal Seed Selection for a Small Market Garden in 1873




First, I didn't know Cos lettuce is what is sold as romaine nowadays.  Romaine wasn't well known in North America even into the 1890s if a Canadian report I found was accurate.  On the other hand, the Cabbage lettuce below is known to us as an iceberg lettuce.


When looking for illustrations and catalogs selling these varieties I tried a D. M. Ferry catalog from 1875.  Success!...sort of, I'm not being too picky about the exact variety.   And I noticed in a Henderson was still selling Tennis Ball eleven years later in 1884.  Oddly named lettuce, isn't it?



The D. M. Ferry catalog is a fascinating look into their business.  

The first illustration of the 6:45 Roll Call is rather grim I thought, but obviously, to Ferry, it is a fine showing of the size of the company.  I rather like the idea of a roll call compared to a time clock though.  Click on the images to see them full sized so you can enjoy the detail!

 Looks like the ladies got to do the hoeing while the men worked with the horse equipment.



This following print certainly rubs me the wrong way!!
Male overseers standing around making sure the ladies weed correctly.