Taking Root

Taking Root

The Nature Writing of William and Adam Summer of Pomaria

  • Author: Kibler, Jr., James Everett; Berry, Wendell
  • Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
  • ISBN: 9781611177749
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781611177756
  • eISBN Epub: 9781611177756
  • Place of publication:  South Carolina , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2017
  • Month: June
  • Language: English

Collected essays by two of America's earliest environmental authors retain relevance today

William Summer founded the renowned Pomaria Nursery, which thrived from the 1840s to the 1870s in central South Carolina and became the center of a bustling town that today bears its name. The nursery grew into one of the most important American nurseries of the antebellum period, offering wide varieties of fruit trees and ornamentals to gardeners throughout the South. Summer also published catalogs containing well-selected and thoroughly tested varieties of plants and assisted his brother, Adam, in publishing several agricultural journals throughout the 1850s until 1862. In Taking Root, James Everett Kibler, Jr., collects for the first time the nature writing of William and Adam Summer, two of America's earliest environmental authors. Their essays on sustainable farm practices, reforestation, local food production, soil regeneration, and respect for Mother Earth have surprising relevance today.

The Summer brothers owned farms in Newberry and Lexington Counties, where they created veritable experimental stations for plants adapted to the southern climate. At its peak the nursery offered more than one thousand varieties of apples, pears, peaches, plums, figs, apricots, and grapes developed and chosen specifically for the southern climate, as well as offering an equal number of ornamentals, including four hundred varieties of repeat-blooming roses. The brothers experimented with and reported on sustainable farm practices, reforestation, land reclamation, soil regeneration, crop diversity rather than the prevalent cotton monoculture, and animal breeds accustomed to hot climates from Carolina to Central Florida.

Written over a span of two decades, their essays offer an impressive environmental ethic. By 1860 Adam had concluded that a person's treatment of nature is a moral issue. Sustainability and long-term goals, rather than get-rich-quick schemes, were key to this philosophy. The brothers' keen interest in literature is evident in the quality of their writing; their essays and sketches are always readable, sometimes poetic, and occasionally humorous and satiric. A representative sampling of their more-than-six hundred articles appear in this volume.

  • Cover
  • Taking Root
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • A Note on the Text
  • Introduction
  • [A Winter Reverie]
  • A Wish
  • The Jerusalem Artichoke (Helianthus Tuberosus, Linn.)
  • The Culture of the Sweet Potatoe
  • The Season: Some Thoughts Grouped after Spending a Day in the Country
  • Natural Angling, or Riding a Sturgeon
  • The Season
  • A Day on the Mohawk
  • Farm Management; or Practical Hints to a Young Beginner
  • The Vegetable Shirt-Tail; or, An Excuse for Backing Out
  • Autumn
  • Winter Green: A Tale of My School Master
  • A Chapter on Live Fences
  • Report on Wheat
  • The Misletoe
  • Address Delivered before the Southern Central Agricultural Society at Macon, Georgia, October 4 [20], 1852
  • The Character of the Pomologist
  • The Flower Garden [I]
  • Plants Adapted to Soiling in the South
  • Plant a Tree
  • A Plea for the Birds
  • Southern Architecture—Location of Homes—Rural Adornment, &c
  • Plant Peas
  • The Forest Trees of the South.—No. 1
  • Forest Trees of the South. No. 2.—the Live Oak—(Quercus sempervirens)
  • Forest Trees of the South. [No. 3.] the Willow Oak. Quercus Phellos
  • One Hour at the New York Farmer’s Club
  • Flowers
  • Satisfactory Results from Systematic Farming—True Farmer-Planter
  • The Crysanthemum
  • Saving Seed
  • Roger Sherman’s Plow
  • “The Earth Is Wearing Out”
  • A Rare Present.—Carolina Oranges
  • Agricultural Humbugs and Fowl Fancies
  • A Short Chapter on Milk Cows
  • A Plea for Broomsedge
  • A Visit from April
  • We Cultivate Too Much Land
  • The Proper Implements for Composting Manures: A Picture in Relief
  • An Editorial Drive: What We Saw during One Morning
  • What Should Be the Chief Crops of the South?
  • Northern Horses in Southern Cities
  • Scuppernong Wine
  • A Good Native Hedge Plant for the South
  • Soap Suds
  • The Best Mode of Stopping Ditches and Washes
  • Cherries
  • Amelanchier: New Southern Fruit
  • China Berries
  • Barefooted Notes on Southern Agriculture. No I
  • Chinese Sugar Cane
  • Cows and Butter: A Delightful Theme
  • Neglect of Family Cemeteries
  • The Destruction of Forests and Its Influence upon Climate & Agriculture
  • New and Rare Trees of Mexico
  • The United States Patent Office Reports, and Government Impositions
  • Barefooted Notes on Southern Agriculture. No III
  • The Guardians of the Patent Office
  • New and Rare Trees and Plants of Mexico. No 2
  • A Transplanted Pleasure
  • China Roses and Other Hedge-Plants in the South
  • Barefooted Notes on Southern Agriculture. No IV
  • Farm Economies
  • Hill-Side Ditching
  • Landscape Gardening
  • New and Cheap Food for Bees
  • The Profession of Agriculture
  • “Bell Ringing”
  • “Spare the Birds”
  • Essay on Reforesting the Country
  • Spanish Chesnuts, Madeira Nuts, etc
  • The Grape: Culture and Pruning
  • Advantages of Trees
  • “How to Get Up Hill”
  • Barefooted Notes on Southern Agriculture. No VI
  • Sheep Husbandry
  • Dogs vs. Sheep
  • Fences
  • Sweets for the People
  • Barefooted Notes on Southern Agriculture. No VIII
  • Peeps over the Fence [1]
  • Beneficial Effects of Flower Culture
  • Peeps over the Fence [2]
  • Fortune’s Double Cape Jessamine: (Gardenia Fortunii)
  • Wood Economy
  • Peeps over the Fence [3]
  • Home as a “Summer Resort”
  • Frankincense a Humbug and Cure for Saddle Galls
  • Who Are Our Benefactors?
  • Peeps over the Fence [4]
  • Mrs. Rion’s Southern Florist
  • Dew and Frost
  • The Flower Garden [II]
  • Farmer Gripe and the Flowers
  • Pea Vine Hay
  • Our Resources
  • Works Cited and Consulted
  • Index