It's begun....

Questionnaires have been sent out to several dozen potential farmgirls from as far away as the state of Washington to across the pond in the Netherlands!

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Louisa Yeomans King

Louisa Yeomans King

1863-1948
From: United States: Michigan, New Jersey, New York
Fields: Agriculture and Horticulture
Keywords: co-founder of the Garden Club of America
Louisa King, the first president of the Women's National Farm and Garden Association, was born in 1863 in Washington, New Jersey, U.S.A. Her interest and dedication to gardening were influenced by her mother's home garden where over 200 herbs were grown.

King was in 1913 one of the founders of the Garden Club of America and from 1914 to 1921 she served as president of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association. In 1915 she published The Well-Considered Garden and later on she published several more gardening books. In 1921 she received the George White Medal of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society. This was the highest gardening honor in the U.S. and she was the first woman to receive it. She was also a fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society of Great Britain.
Louisa King died in 1948 in Milton, Massachusetts.




Contributed by Danuta Bois, 1996.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Lady Bird Johnson



Claudia Alta "Lady Bird" Taylor Johnson--December 22, 1912-July11, 2007


Claudia Alta Taylor was born in Karnack, Texas, a town in Harrison County, near the states border with Louisiana. Her birthplace was "The Brick House," a former slave plantation mansion on the outskirts of town which her father had purchased shortly before her birth. Nearly all of both her maternal and paternal forebears had arrived in the Virginia Colony during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Her father was a native of Alabama and primarily of English Ancestry with small amounts of Welsh and Danish; her mother was also a native of Alabama and of English and Scottish decent.


Lady Bird was the First Lady of the United States from 1963 until 1969 during the presidency of her husband Lyndon B. Johnson. Throughout her life, she was an advocate for beautification of the nations cities and highways. Leaving the White House in 1969 and her husband's death in 1973, Lady Bird became an entrepreneur, creating the $150 million LBJ Holdings Company, and was a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest of civilian honors.