Food for Thought: Celebrating the Vegetables of the 1890s

Think about this vegetable fact: In 1903, 544 varieties of cabbage were listed by seed houses across the United States. By 1983, just 28 of those varieties were represented in our national seed bank at the National Seed Storage Laboratory (now the National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation).

Hundreds of other varieties have disappeared—not only of cabbages, but also of lettuce and corn and tomatoes and too many other crops to list. And that, in a nutshell, is why it continues to be important to plant heirloom varieties.

Vintage Varieties,
Still in Vogue

PHOTO: Cover of Vaughn's seed catalog, featuring Osage musk melon.
Stunning color illustrations made vintage nursery catalogs hard to resist. 

Heirlooms remind the Garden of our parent organization, the Chicago Horticultural Society, which was officially established in 1890.

What was growing in Chicago vegetable gardens that year? Two big and beautiful beds at the Regenstein Fruit & Vegetable Garden honored the tried-and-true midwestern varieties that were the staples of our great- and great-great-grandparents. The cabbages beloved by the immigrants who flocked to the Midwest, like ‘Early Jersey Wakefield’ and ‘Mammoth Red Rock’. The beans that could be canned to sustain the family, like ‘Henderson’s Bush’. The root vegetables that could overwinter, like parsnip ‘Mammoth Sandwich Island’ and rutabaga ‘Laurentian’. And the onions and lovage and cutting celery that were the flavor enhancers of the day.

Horticulturist Lisa Hilgenberg tracked down the varieties by going to the source: the seed catalogs that nurserymen, farmers, and gardeners ordered from and depended on. In the Rare Book Collection of our Lenhardt Library, she pored over an 1891 Storr’s & Harrison catalog, a Burpee’s from 1901, and numerous Vaughan’s Seed Store catalogs. (Vaughan’s started on the East Coast, then became one of the leading Chicago seed houses.) Recognizing that some varieties from the turn of the twentieth century were still available today (‘Bull Nose’ pepper, ‘Philadelphia White Box’ radish, ‘Wapsipinicon Peach’ tomato), she sought out those seeds from sources like Seed Savers Exchange, the D. Landreth Seed Company, and Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds.

As seedlings arrived at the Fruit & Vegetable Garden from the production nursery, Lisa planted them in a classic bed layout inspired by the vegetable gardens at Monticello: 4- by 6-foot beds (easy to harvest from either side) separated by mulched paths made with wood chips that would have been straw in earlier centuries. As one crop is harvested, the next crop is planted—a nod to the constant production that was a matter of survival for our forefathers and foremothers.

PHOTO: Early Jersey Wakefield cabbage.
Early Jersey Wakefield cabbage
PHOTO: Mammoth Red Rock cabbage.
Mammoth Red Rock cabbage
PHOTO: A view of the heirloom seed beds in the Fruit & Vegetable Garden.
As they fill in, the beds create a strikingly beautiful mosaic of color, of texture, and history.

Heirloom fruits and vegetables are more than interesting food ingredients—they represent the voices of each generation informing the next. Think about that as you plan to grow heirloom varieties in your own vegetable garden this year.


©2015 Chicago Botanic Garden and my.chicagobotanic.org

Published by

Karen Z.

Karen Zaworski is a writer who likes to use as few words as possible, a photographer who still works with black-and-white film and a darkroom, and a gardener who actually likes to weed.

3 thoughts on “Food for Thought: Celebrating the Vegetables of the 1890s”

  1. While I believe it’s likely the diversity decreased in the 8 decades indicated in your post: “In 1903, 544 varieties of cabbage were listed by seed houses across the United States. By 1983, just 28 of those varieties were represented….” I also wonder if a portion of that original 544 could be written off due to unreconciled duplicates. Any thoughts?

    Even if it was a lesser number of truly unique varieties in 1903, it does not diminish the relative paucity contained in just 28 options in 1983. I hope we are headed in an upward direction for the 2015 cabbage seed census!

    Thanks for a thoughtful post.

    Slaw, anyone?

    1. Hello, Anne! Your thoughtful question stimulated quite a fun conversation out at the Fruit & Vegetable Garden (and a desire to visit the national seed bank!). Doubtless there were duplicates, as many immigrants brought seeds from the same homelands, yet spread out here across many states. It¹s astounding to think that the great seed houses of the early 20th century kept it as straight as they did, working like central clearinghouses for farmers and growers in the days when the U.S. Mail was the primary mode of communication. More food for thought: Local and regional crops would have adapted like micro-populations over time, too—a cabbage grown in Maine would eventually look and taste different than the same cabbage grown in Minnesota due to soil, weather, etc.

    2. Hi, Anne! I was reviewing some notes from a recent lecture that talked about varietal diversity being the biological foundation of agriculture. One of the examples given was wheat: wheat is grown in every US state. The US patent office sent out seed in small quantities to farmers. This caused wheat plants to adapt to different geographical areas…it goes a long way in explaining our agricultural system in this country…all interesting!

      Lisa

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