The New Genesee Farmer and Gardener's Journal
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Published: 1842
Total Pages: 204
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Published: 1842
Total Pages: 204
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Published: 1865
Total Pages: 392
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Published: 1834
Total Pages: 426
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Published: 1834
Total Pages: 434
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Published: 1849
Total Pages: 302
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Published: 1836
Total Pages: 432
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Published: 1941
Total Pages: 204
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Clarence H. Danhof
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 346
ISBN-13: 9780674107700
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAmerican agriculture changed radically between 1820 and 1870. In turning slowly from subsistence to commercial farming, farmers on the average doubled the portion of their production places on the market, and thereby laid the foundations for today's highly productive agricultural industry. But the modern system was by no means inevitable. It evolved slowly through an intricate process in which innovative and imitative entrepreneurs were the key instruments.
Author: Camden Burd
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 2024-10-15
Total Pages: 241
ISBN-13: 1501777939
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn The Roots of Flower City, Camden Burd explores the economic and ecological significance of Rochester plant nurserymen over the course of the nineteenth century. As the first boomtown in the United States, Rochester was an embodiment of nineteenth-century market economies and social reform movements. Connected to the eastern seaboard by the Erie Canal, the city's unique economic, cultural, and environmental conditions fostered and sustained a vast and influential commercial plant nursery industry that attracted the nation's most prominent horticulturists and nurserymen. Rochester-area nurserymen built parks and rural cemeteries, landscaped homes and schools, and promoted horticultural pursuits regionally and nationally. As their influence grew, many of these horticultural entrepreneurs developed into the city's elite and played a leading role in shaping Rochester's economic, social, and physical landscape. Most significantly, nurserymen enthusiastically participated in the American imperial project, selling and distributing fruit, shade, and ornamental trees, shrubs, and flowers across the continent, transforming landscapes and ecologies far beyond New York. The Roots of Flower City tells the remarkable history of Rochester's outsized influence on the homes, estates, towns, and cities of nineteenth-century America as it weathered economic downturns and competition from other regions. One threat, however, proved to be too much to overcome. As Burd details, the spread of the destructive San Jose scale through the transcontinental plant trade prompted federal legislation that would lead to the decline of the Rochester plant nursery industry in the last decade of the nineteenth century, ending a sustained era of success and ecological impact.
Author: Frank Luther Mott
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 1938
Total Pages: 940
ISBN-13: 9780674395503
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"The five volumes of A History of American Magazines constitute a unique cultural history of America, viewed through the pages and pictures of her periodicals from the publication of the first monthly magazine in 1741 through the golden age of magazines in the twentieth century"--Page 4 of cover.