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Monthly Board Meeting
July 09, 2013 - Monthly Board Meeting at 6:00
Depression glassware minature
June 01, 2013 - The museum has on display the month of June miniature (child dishes) depression glassware replicas.
Nurseries
Southwestern Iowa is a prime
location for nurseries due to its fertile soil, river drainage
and ample growing season. By the 1870s several small nurseries
were growing staples (such as hedge plans and fruit trees) for
pioneer farms in Page and Fremont counties. David S. Lake
established his Shenandoah Nursery in 1870, and it soon became
the Midwest’s larges producer of apple trees. T.E.B. Mason
founded another major nursery, Mount Arbor, just outside
Shenandoah in 1875. Around 1892 its namesake started the Henry
Field Seed Company here. In 1902 Edward S. Welch of Mount Arbor
Nursery helped his brother, J.C. Welch, create Welch’s Nursery.
Edward S. Welch also helped his son-in-law, Earl May; organize
his own nursery business in 1919.
Each of our nurseries had a main office, mailing and packing
buildings, warehouses and cold rooms, which kept live plants
dormant. Railroads were important for shipping, and often
railroad sidings ran right next to the stockrooms. Employment
fluctuated seasonally, peaking during fall harvest and late
winter and spring when orders were shipped. Men worked in the
fields, while women handled most secretarial, packing and
mailing jobs.
Different eras saw different demand for seeds and nursery
stock. Pioneers grew fruit trees and hedges to enclose their
land. Early in the twentieth century, ornamental plants and
evergreens rivaled the production of fruit trees. As demand for
nursery stock increased, so did acreage under production in
Shenandoah. By the 1950’s garden seeds and some nursery stock
were being ground in temperate locations such as California and
Washington.
Due to the agricultural nature of the region, seed corn
became an important product. Armstrong’s Mammoth Seed Company
and Ratekin’s Seed House (two Shenandoah firms) began producing
seed corn in the 1880’s. Around 1910 Henry Field began
experimenting with hybrid “Mule Corn” and first offered it to
his customers in 1922. Earl May followed suit in the 1930’s,
selling McNeilly Hybrids and then his own “Maygold” corn in
1949.
As product demand changed, so did the ways our nurseries
reached their customers. Mail order catalogs became popular, and
orders flooded the Shenandoah post office. In the 1920’s both
Henry Field and Earl May started radio stations on which they
advertised their products. Their “Jubilees” annually brought
masses of consumers to Shenandoah. Field and May both expanded
into retail stores in the 1930’s and garden centers in the
1960’s.
Local nurseries prospered for decades until the Great
Depression. While all area nurseries survived, Henry Field’s
business experienced severe financial difficulties. By 1954 most
of these nurseries were still operated by descendents of their
founders except for Fields’ and Mount Arbor. Shenandoah
Nurseries was absorbed by Mount Arbor in 1976. In 1978 Mount
Arbor filed for bankruptcy and then reorganized. In 1983 Henry
Field Seed and Nursery Company was bought by AMFAC, Inc. Earl
May is the only major retail nursery headquartered in Shenandoah
today.
The overall impact of these nurseries and seed houses on
western Page and eastern Fremont counties has been immense of
the last 130 years. Altogether, their friendly competition and
superior nursery products have transformed our area into one of
the most prosperous places in Iowa and brought us worldwide
renown.