Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Historical Sketch
- Scope and Content Note
- Container List
- Publications
- Selected Bibliography
Introduction
The U.S. Plant Introduction Garden Records cover the period from 1895 to 1951, with the bulk of the material produced between 1908 and 1919. The collection occupies 5.75 linear feet of shelf space. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Subtropical Horticulture Research Station in Miami, Florida transferred these records from its library to the Special Collections of the National Agricultural Library (NAL) in 2014.
The materials in the collection are in fair to good condition and may be used without restrictions. The supplementary reports on the Miami station and specific crops were removed from their original cloth-covered binders because of water damage. These reports were re-housed in acid-free folders and document boxes. Some of the USDA publications transferred with this collection, including Farmers' Bulletins and Bureau of Plant Industry Bulletins, were discarded because they were in poor condition, and copies already exist in NAL's general collection.
This collection was arranged and described by Diane Wunsch in 2015.
Historical Sketch
The USDA established a Plant Introduction Garden on six acres of rented land on Brickell Avenue in Miami, Florida in 1898. David G. Fairchild, chief of the USDA's Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction at that time, led an effort to build field stations for adapting imported plants in different regions of the country. He planned the Miami facility as a place to test, develop, and distribute plant material brought back by USDA plant explorers from around the world.
The original garden site soon became crowded. In 1914, the USDA's Bureau of Plant Industry leased an additional 25 acres in the Buena Vista subdivision of north Miami in order to expand. As the department's plant exploration activities continued, the garden quickly outgrew the combined Brickell and Buena Vista sites. On Fairchild's recommendation, the USDA obtained permission from the War Department to use part of the abandoned Chapman Field Military Reservation for the plant introduction garden.
The first permanent planting was made at the Chapman Field site in 1923. Over the next three years, many of the plants grown at the Brickell and Buena Vista gardens were transferred to the new location. In 1926, a hurricane swept through Miami, causing severe damage to the early gardens. They were soon abandoned, most of their plants having been established at Chapman Field.
In a departmental reorganization in 1972, the Chapman Field facility was renamed the Subtropical Horticulture Research Station (SHRS). In 1987, the plant collections at SHRS were formally designated as part of the National Plant Germplasm System (NPGS), and Chapman Field became a National Germplasm Repository.
Scope and Content Note
The U.S. Plant Introduction Garden Records comprise materials from files, reports, manuscripts, and publications transferred from the USDA's Subtropical Horticulture Research Station in Miami, Florida. The records in this collection contain original and copy correspondence, notes, reports, plant inventories, photographs, lists, books, and drawings that record the early activities of the Miami research station.
The bulk of the files contain materials, primarily notes, correspondence, photographs, clippings, and pamphlets, on the subject of mangoes. The documents in the files were kept in their original subject order without any apparent format or date arrangement. One box of files contains original handwritten and typewritten correspondence from David G. Fairchild to T. B. McClelland, Harold Loomis, R. A. Young, and others at the Miami station between 1939 and 1951. There are also carbon copies of replies from station personnel to Fairchild. Other records include documents from Fairchild's 1939-1941 Pacific expedition, and two handwritten and illustrated notebooks of F. Wilson Popenoe recording his observations of mangoes in India. In addition, there are a few items related to the investigation of cryptostegia as an alternative source of rubber during World War II.
The supplementary project reports cover the following tropical crops: Annona (anona), artichoke, avocado, carob, chayote, lychee (litchi), mango, and papaya. There are also three volumes of supplemental reports on the Miami plant introduction garden's activities, and a list of rubber-producing plants.
Among the bound volumes are reports of David Fairchild's trips to the Florida plant introduction station in 1913, 1914, and 1915. The collection also includes a few volumes of bulletins of the Bureau of Plant Industry and the Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction, and proceedings of the American Pomological Society for 1891 and 1895.
Container List
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
001 | 001 | David Fairchild correspondence | 1939-1944 |
001 | 002 | David Fairchild correspondence | 1945-1951 |
001 | 003 | Photograph of David Fairchild testing spray equipment | undated |
001 | 004 | Fairchild Expedition, notes sent to Washington, D.C. | 1939-1941, 1943 |
001 | 005 | Fairchild Expedition, original notes (1 of 2) | 1939-1941 |
001 | 006 | Fairchild Expedition, original notes (2 of 2) | 1939-1941 |
001 | 007 | Charles Torrey Simpson library, bibliographies | 1936, 1943, 1945 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
002 | 001 | Mango (1 of 2) | 1889-1919 |
002 | 002 | Mango (2 of 2) | 1889-1919 |
002 | 003 | Mango (1 of 2) | 1908-1916, undated |
002 | 004 | Mango (2 of 2) | 1908-1916, undated |
002 | 005 | Mango (1 of 2) | 1909-1916, undated |
002 | 006 | Mango (2 of 2) | 1909-1916, undated |
002 | 007 | Mango | 1903, 1907, 1911-1918, undated |
002 | 008 | Mango varieties, L | 1903, 1908, 1910, 1915, undated |
002 | 009 | Mango varieties, M | 1911, undated |
002 | 010 | Mango varieties, N | 1903, 1916, undated |
002 | 011 | Mango varieties, O | undated |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
003 | 001 | Mango | 1889, 1903-1915, 1922, undated |
003 | 002 | Mango | 1889, 1903, 1909-1916, undated |
003 | 003 | Mango | 1913, 1915, undated |
003 | 004 | Mango | 1913-1917, undated |
003 | 005 | Mango | 1900, 1907-1912, 1915 |
003 | 006 | Mango | undated |
003 | 007 | Mango | 1911-1915, undated |
003 | 008 | Mango | 1911-1915, undated |
003 | 009 | Mango notebook, Bombay, F. Wilson Popenoe | 1912 |
003 | 010 | Mango notebook, Calcutta, F. Wilson Popenoe | 1912 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
004 | 001 | Mangoes, bananas, and plantains: reports | 1890,1928 |
004 | 002 | Mango varieties and commercial scores | 1903, undated |
004 | 003 | "The Mango" by G. Marshall Woodrow, manuscript and correspondence | 1903 |
004 | 004 | Mango introductions | 1907-1909 |
004 | 005 | Correspondence related to Sandersha mangoes | 1909 |
004 | 006 | Literature and correspondence course materials on fruit and nut crops in California (1 of 2) | 1915, 1925, undated |
004 | 007 | Literature and correspondence course materials on fruit and nut crops in California (2 of 2) | 1915, 1925, undated |
004 | 008 | Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction progress report | 1922 |
004 | 009 | Photograph panel albums | 1942, undated |
004 | 010 | Cryptostegia literature | 1934, undated |
004 | 011 | Cryptostegia program of SHADA in Haiti | 1942 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
005 | 001 | Annona (1 of 2) | 1906-1916 |
005 | 002 | Annona (2 of 2) | 1909-1916 |
005 | 003 | Annona | 1917-1919 |
005 | 004 | Artichoke and chayote (1 of 2) | 1907-1915 |
005 | 005 | Artichoke and chayote (2 of 2) | 1907-1915 |
005 | 006 | Avocado (1 of 2) | 1909-1912 |
005 | 007 | Avocado (2 of 2) | 1909-1912 |
005 | 008 | Avocado (1 of 2) | 1914 |
005 | 009 | Avocado (2 of 2) | 1914 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
006 | 001 | Carob (1 of 2) | 1910-1918 |
006 | 002 | Carob (2 of 2) | 1910-1918 |
006 | 003 | Chayote (1 of 2) | 1916 |
006 | 004 | Chayote (2 of 2) | 1916 |
006 | 005 | Chayote (1 of 2) | 1917-1918 |
006 | 006 | Chayote (2 of 2) | 1917-1918 |
006 | 007 | Chayote (1 of 2) | 1919,1921 |
006 | 008 | Chayote (2 of 2) | 1919,1921 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
007 | 001 | Lychee (1 of 2) | 1907-1915 |
007 | 002 | Lychee (2 of 2) | 1907-1915 |
007 | 003 | Lychee (1 of 2) | 1916-1919 |
007 | 004 | Lychee (2 of 2) | 1916-1919 |
007 | 005 | Mango (1 of 2) | 1908-1912 |
007 | 006 | Mango (2 of 2) | 1908-1912 |
007 | 007 | Mango (1 of 3) | 1913-1914 |
007 | 008 | Mango (2 of 3) | 1913-1914 |
007 | 009 | Mango (3 of 3) | 1913-1914 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
008 | 001 | Papaya (1 of 2) | 1912-1914 |
008 | 002 | Papaya (2 of 2) | 1912-1914 |
008 | 003 | Papaya (1 of 2) | 1915-1919 |
008 | 004 | Papaya (2 of 2) | 1915-1919 |
008 | 005 | List of rubber producing plants | undated |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
009 | 001 | Miami Plant Introduction Garden (1 of 2) | 1907-1914 |
009 | 002 | Miami Plant Introduction Garden (2 of 2) | 1907-1914 |
009 | 003 | Miami Plant Introduction Garden (1 of 2) | 1915-1916 |
009 | 004 | Miami Plant Introduction Garden (2 of 2) | 1915-1916 |
009 | 005 | Miami Plant Introduction Garden | 1917-1918 |
Box |
Folder |
Title |
Date(s) |
---|---|---|---|
010 | Report of Florida Trip in 1913 | 1913 | |
010 | Report of Southern Trip, Spring of 1914 | 1914 | |
010 | Report of Florida Trip in 1915 | 1915 |
Publications. 10 volumes. 1886-1923.
Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Bulletin of Foreign Plant Introductions. Vol. 1-50. Plant Immigrants. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, 1908.
Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Bulletin of Foreign Plant Introductions. Vol. 51-100. Plant Immigrants. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, 1910.
Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Bulletin of Foreign Plant Introductions. Vol. 101-150. Plant Immigrants. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, 1914.
Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Bulletin of Foreign Plant Introductions. Vol. 153-176. Plant Immigrants. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, 1919.
Proceedings of the Twentieth Session of the American Pomological Society Held in Grand Rapids, Mich., September 9th, 10th and 11th, 1885 . s.l.: American Pomological Society, 1886.
Proceedings of the Twenty-Third Session of the American Pomological Society Held in Washington, D.C., September 22-24, 1891 . Ann Arbor, MI: The Register Publishing Company, 1891.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry. Bulletins 54-57. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1903-1905.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry. Bulletins 66-69. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1904-1905.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry. Inventory of Seeds and Plants Imported by the Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Vol. 61-66. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1919.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry. Inventory of Seeds and Plants Imported by the Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Vol. 67-76. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1921.
Sources used for this finding aid
Fairchild, David. "Reminiscences of Early Plant Introduction in South Florida." Proceedings of the Florida State Horticultural Society 51 (1938): 11-33. Condensed and reprinted by USDA Agricultural Research Service, https://www.ars.usda.gov/southeast-area/miami-fl/subtropical-horticulture-research/docs/reminiscences-of-early-plant-introduction-in-south-florida/
Loomis, H. F. "Activities of the U.S. Plant Introduction Garden." 1957. Reprinted by USDA Agricultural Research Service, https://www.ars.usda.gov/southeast-area/miami-fl/subtropical-horticulture-research/docs/activities-of-the-us-plant-introduction-garden/.
McGuire, Raymond G., Raymond J. Schnell, and Walter P. Gould. "A Century of Research with USDA in Miami."Proceedings of the Florida State Horticultural Society 112 (1999): 224-32. Reprinted by USDA Agricultural Research Service, https://www.ars.usda.gov/southeast-area/miami-fl/subtropical-horticulture-research/docs/a-century-of-research-with-usda-in-miami/