I wonder when the first-ever novelty crop postcard like this appeared? California had similar ones. https://zirk.us/@SmithsonianRoulette/111150984486967984 #AgHistory
Smithsonian Roulette (@[email protected])

Attached: 1 image title: Harvesting a Profitable Crop of Onions in Iowa artist: W. H. Martin, born 1865-died 1940 source: Smithsonian American Art Museum #Art #Design #Museum #Gallery #MastodonArt #MastoArt #Culture #Random https://americanart.si.edu/collections/search/artwork/?id=71746

zirkus

Dang, here's a bit of CA horticultural history I didn't know. The Watts Towers survived long enough to become recognized because an actor & horticulturalist named Nicholas King bought the property from Rodia's neighbor (who Rodia sold it to when he got sick of getting hassled over the towers). He then seems to have had enough swing to get LA to call off its dogs.

He later settled around Point Arena to open a nursery and graft apples!

#AgHistory #ArtHistory
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_King

Nicholas King - Wikipedia

Looked up the birthplace of 'Carmel' almond on Google Maps, expecting it to be paved over. To my surprise, it's still farmland!

The original almond orchard is gone, but there are younger orchards around.

#AgHistory #Almond #Horticulture

I've known the 'Hass' story for nearly 2 decades, but just tonight finally read the story of 'Nonpareil'. In both cases, the bonanza parent tree was nearly grafted to something else. It's only because each grower was delayed grafting all of their seedlings that the superior qualities of the seedling had a chance to be discovered.

Both of these chance seedlings' clones have dominated the market in CA and often abroad for many decades.

https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=PRP18870409.2.10.1&srpos=1&e=------188-en--20-PRP-1--txt-txIN-nonpareil+almond-ARTICLE------

#Horticulture #AgHistory

Pacific Rural Press 9 April 1887 — California Digital Newspaper Collection

California Digital Newspaper Collection

For all that people go wild over marker-assisted breeding, the leading avocado and the leading almond cultivars in CA are both the results of planting out seedlings. They were chance seedling accidents.

#PlantBreeding #AgHistory

Images shared from: Cycling Museum of Minnesota and Texas State Historical Association.

The chainwheels image shared by Cycling Museum of Minnesota reminds me of cattle brands charts I have seen. Both have a unique artistry to them and both serve a functional purpose.

#aghistory #cyclinghistory #cycling #histodons #history #sporthistory

The word for Day 21 in English then Māori of #Museum30 #View #Tirohanga

The view or tirohanga of the landscape surrounding the removal of the Eastern Bush hall is spectacular. See our Central and Western Districts Archive for more information on this here: https://ehive.com/collections/202139/objects/1565760/eastern-bush-district-old-hall

#History #Heritage #Aotearoa #NZ #GLAM #Clifden #Museums #Archives #digipres
#EasternBush #Waiau #Ōtautau #Murihiku #Southland #Farming
#CommunityCollaboration #Ōrawia #RuralNZ #AgHistory
#CentralAndWesternArchive

Eastern Bush District - Old Hall ; Mouat, Stewart; 1970-1980; CWA.004.42.5 on eHive

The first mention I have found of the earliest Eastern Bush Hall, was in reference to Henry Moffat and his son Norman (a long-standing family name in the district), receiving a timber order for building a hall, in 1898. I am not at this point sure what happened to the said hall, but will do some more research. Te Hikoi Museum has a fabulous photo in their collection, also on eHive, of an event at the early hall, around 1900 which is recorded as a Jubliee, so maybe there was an even earlier hall? The photo above, which has been labelled as: "Eastern Bush Public Hall, 1970's, before being shifted to Blackmount." The hall was cut in half so it could be transported, as shown in the photo, so it must have been a reasonable size. But it also appears as if this could be a later hall than the one referred to from the Moffat records, but someone else may know more. The Community Centre is now the old (third) school building and district activities including a Playgroup are held there on a regular basis. Lincoln Moffat, (a grandson of Norman mentioned above who was the supplier of timber to build the hall in 1898), recounts how his father Charlie was very sad about the end of the hall, as to quote him, "it held so many memories. As a young serviceman leaving for a war there would have been a sendoff. Dances, meetings, 21st birthday parties, farewells and welcomes. It also meant the end of dances which had been such a part of the rural social life. The district was offered the closed Eastern Bush school building which was modern and low maintenance so it was a no brainer." Thanks Lincoln for adding more personal history to the story. If you or anyone you know has any more photos, information or accounts of the Eastern Bush Hall during the years, please do share these in the comments section. You can do this by making a comment in the space provided under the image page. Please let us know if you have more records to add, they will add the heritage records of this very old property.

eHive

The word for Day 20 in English then Māori of #Museum30 #Bookshelves #PaePukapuka

Two of the bookshelves or pae pukapuka of our new community archive project for the Central and Western Districts of Murihiku Southland in Aotearoa NZ. To view the archive see: https://ehive.com/collections/202139/central-western-murihiku-southland-archive

#History #Heritage #Aotearoa #NZ #GLAM #Clifden #Museums #Archives #digipres
#EasternBush #Waiau #Ōtautau #Murihiku #Southland #Farming
#CommunityCollaboration #Ōrawia #RuralNZ #AgHistory
#CentralAndWesternArchive

Central & Western Murihiku Southland Archive on eHive

The Central & Western Murihiku Southland Archive has been set up as a community archive project, to digitally gather, store, preserve, record and share our district history. It is especially important for those local communities who have no history repository locally, to have a place to keep a copy of their local heritage safe and to promote the history of their communities and those who settled them. But all district histories are welcome here. So, if your district, town, farm, business or family are within our area and you would like to have the history of this recorded for our current and future generations, please make contact. This is a free community service. Our motto is: "By Community, For Community". We accept photos, articles, memories, books, records, maps, ephemera and all paper based items for digitizing and putting into this new archive. You can also ask us to take photographs of objects and properties for the archive. Oral history is something else we will be working on shortly. If you have a story of local history to tell, please do let us know. Remember this is YOUR archive as part of your local community, a place where you can save and store any local history, without it leaving your ownership. This archive is a place where everybody in the community can contribute, comment, interact, share memories and our combined history. We do not take your important history to keep, we professionally copy it, ensure these copies are safe and share them with the community. Your heritage remains in your hands. So if you have precious family memories you want to share with others but retain ownership of, this community archive is for you. The area we will be covering with the archive is one in which the settlers within it often moved around to live and work in different local districts, so their family collections can be held together and not spread across varying institutions. The Western part of the district covered by the archive will be roughly from Piopiotahi/Fiordland in the West, right across the Waiau District, and along the coast south west coast, down into the Aparima/Riverton in the South. We are focusing on the Waiau area in the beginning, mainly as our museum here does not have any online presence or set opening hours. We have also started with preserving the history of the Eastern Bush community first up, as it is an area without a fully recorded written and photographic history and with quite a few long-standing families moving out of the area in recent years, it was imperative that the history of this community and its important past stories and heritage be saved for our future generations. If you can provide any photos and information from the Eastern Bush area, please contact our local Digitisation Project Manager as below, for how you can help out. We hope to have a community information event soon. We will also have a small fee based research service based within the online archive, which will help to fund the growth of the project. If you are looking for information on any family, person, business, farm, property or event within the local area and in the districts we cover, we can quite possibly help you with this, as we have a trained historical researcher. Please contact the Social History Project Manager for information about our research service, as per the details below: The archive is completely digital so is only available online, but the beauty of this is that it can be accessed by anyone, anywhere, 24/7. As this is a new site, a new model and a community voluntary project, please can you bear with us as we progress, grow and add new features. The plan is for each local community to have their own entries within this site and for all the early settler families in each of these, to also be included in that, with a brief history and photos. If you can help with this by providing yours, please contact as below. For more information, questions or donations, please just ask.

eHive

The word for Day 19 in English then Māori of #Museum30 #Location #Wāhi

The location or wāhi covered by our new community archive project is the Central and Western Districts of Murihiku Southland in Aotearoa NZ. See the entries we have uploaded so far here: https://ehive.com/collections/202139/central-western-murihiku-southland-archive

#History #Heritage #Aotearoa #NZ #GLAM #Clifden #Museums #Archives #digipres
#EasternBush #Waiau #Ōtautau #Murihiku #Southland #Farming
#CommunityCollaboration #Ōrawia #RuralNZ #AgHistory
#CentralAndWesternArchive

Central & Western Murihiku Southland Archive on eHive

The Central & Western Murihiku Southland Archive has been set up as a community archive project, to digitally gather, store, preserve, record and share our district history. It is especially important for those local communities who have no history repository locally, to have a place to keep a copy of their local heritage safe and to promote the history of their communities and those who settled them. But all district histories are welcome here. So, if your district, town, farm, business or family are within our area and you would like to have the history of this recorded for our current and future generations, please make contact. This is a free community service. Our motto is: "By Community, For Community". We accept photos, articles, memories, books, records, maps, ephemera and all paper based items for digitizing and putting into this new archive. You can also ask us to take photographs of objects and properties for the archive. Oral history is something else we will be working on shortly. If you have a story of local history to tell, please do let us know. Remember this is YOUR archive as part of your local community, a place where you can save and store any local history, without it leaving your ownership. This archive is a place where everybody in the community can contribute, comment, interact, share memories and our combined history. We do not take your important history to keep, we professionally copy it, ensure these copies are safe and share them with the community. Your heritage remains in your hands. So if you have precious family memories you want to share with others but retain ownership of, this community archive is for you. The area we will be covering with the archive is one in which the settlers within it often moved around to live and work in different local districts, so their family collections can be held together and not spread across varying institutions. The Western part of the district covered by the archive will be roughly from Piopiotahi/Fiordland in the West, right across the Waiau District, and along the coast south west coast, down into the Aparima/Riverton in the South. We are focusing on the Waiau area in the beginning, mainly as our museum here does not have any online presence or set opening hours. We have also started with preserving the history of the Eastern Bush community first up, as it is an area without a fully recorded written and photographic history and with quite a few long-standing families moving out of the area in recent years, it was imperative that the history of this community and its important past stories and heritage be saved for our future generations. If you can provide any photos and information from the Eastern Bush area, please contact our local Digitisation Project Manager as below, for how you can help out. We hope to have a community information event soon. We will also have a small fee based research service based within the online archive, which will help to fund the growth of the project. If you are looking for information on any family, person, business, farm, property or event within the local area and in the districts we cover, we can quite possibly help you with this, as we have a trained historical researcher. Please contact the Social History Project Manager for information about our research service, as per the details below: The archive is completely digital so is only available online, but the beauty of this is that it can be accessed by anyone, anywhere, 24/7. As this is a new site, a new model and a community voluntary project, please can you bear with us as we progress, grow and add new features. The plan is for each local community to have their own entries within this site and for all the early settler families in each of these, to also be included in that, with a brief history and photos. If you can help with this by providing yours, please contact as below. For more information, questions or donations, please just ask.

eHive