The farm garden

I’m taking a bit of a break and have nothing new for you today. I have been doing a good bit of garden work around the house, and that reminded me of this post from April, 2021. Now we’re just finishing the first week of June, 2022, and it’s almost summertime. In southeastern Wisconsin the first spring flowers are done, and the next round of blossoms have been blooming for weeks. The tomato, bean and pepper seedlings are in the ground and doing nicely (although the rabbits have been nibbling on far too many green bean sprouts), and the roses are beginning to unfold. So even though this was originally an early-spring essay, I hope you enjoy this garden-themed repost from last year.

Planning the garden

It’s early April, and the growing season is not far off. For a farmer like Jonathan M. Clark, it’s a little early yet for plowing and sowing, but not too early to make plans and sharpen the tools. For a farmer’s wife, like Mary (Turck) Clark, it’s not too soon to think about the farm garden, its crops and layout.

I don’t know if Mary and Jonathan were regular readers of the popular and affordable farmers’ almanacs of their era; I wouldn’t be surprised if they were. There were many to chose from. Perhaps they had a copy of something like:

The Cultivator […], New Series, Vol. VII, Albany, 1850, title page. Click to open larger image in new window.

A growing family in a new house

Mary and Jonathan celebrated their 10th wedding anniversary on March 15, 1850. They were now parents of four children: Caroline (age 9), Henry (7), Elizabeth (5) and a 3-year-old daughter, “P. A.,” later known as Persie.

In spring, 1850, Mary was expecting once again. The Clark’s fifth child, a daughter, would be born on May 9th. On the 1850 census she was enumerated as Mary. Later, for a while, she would be called Sarah. As an adult she would be known as Theresa or Tresa.

In addition to Mary, Jonathan, and the four Clark children—and the child soon to arrive—the household included Mary’s youngest brother, Benjamin Turck (age 11) and a hired man, a 30 year-old German immigrant named John Buck. With eight people in the home, it’s good that the big, two-story stone house was completed around 1848.

The farm garden

To feed all those hungry mouths, the Clark farm almost certainly included a substantial farm garden. Such a garden would have been near the house and would have included all manner of fruits, vegetables, tubers, legumes, herbs and—possibly—some purely decorative flowers. Mary, as head of all things associated with the home and kitchen, would have been in charge of the garden, too. The older children would have helped with planting, weeding and harvesting, or by minding the youngest children so Mary could focus on the garden and her other household tasks.

By 1850, the Clarks were well established on their farm and in their new, large home. We don’t know what Mary’s farm garden looked like, but perhaps she took inspiration from illustrations and suggestions in the various farmers’ almanacs, such as this page from Vol. VII, No. 1 of the 1850 Cultivator:

The Cultivator […], New Series, Vol. VII, Albany, 1850, p. 27. Click to open larger image in new window.

My guess is that Mary and Jonathan probably didn’t splurge on a large garden vase or sun dial. And the suggested geometrical shrubbery (h) or a columned “Rustic Alcove” seem a bit high-toned for 1850 Mequon. Even so, it’s still worth looking closely at this garden plan.

Of course, the farm in the engraving is laid out differently than the Clark’s farm. In the picture, the farmhouse (A) is approached via a curving drive (c) and shares a kind of courtyard or “parking area” (d) with the barns (e). The Clark farm—as best we know—lacked most of these features. From early days, the Clark farmhouse was on the west side of Cedarburg Road, and the barn and other outbuildings were on the east side.

For me, the most important reason to look at this 1850 magazine illustration is to get a sense of how large an established farm garden could be. As a very rough estimate, this suggested garden (B) covers more than 10 times the area of the farmhouse itself. This is an entirely realistic size for a 19th-century farm garden.1 I would expect Mary Clark’s garden to have been similar in size, even if it differed in its details.

What did Mary grow?

There’s much we don’t know about what—exactly—the Clarks and their Mequon neighbors grew on their farms. It’s likely that we can find out more, once I can access microfilms at the Wisconsin Historical Society. Based on the compiled statistics from Washington (later Ozaukee) County’s federal decennial census for 1850, we do know that certain garden crops were grown in the area. These included peas, beans, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, barley and buckwheat. Other grains, such as corn, wheat and oats, were major farm crops and would have filled the large farm fields.

Not found on the 1850 census reports are garden crops such as berries, tree fruits, herbs, and other typical garden produce. I suspect this is because these crops were not grown as surplus, market produce, but simply for home consumption. We know that some 1850 Wisconsin farmers were growing strawberries, pears and apples and would continue to do so. And Mary may well have kept a beehive or two for honey production.

For more on the Clarks’ farm and garden products, see Harvest Time: 1850, part 1 and Harvest Time: 1850, part 2. For a look at the now-demolished Clark barn, see Harvest Time

Until next time, be well. Stay safe. Wear a mask.

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  1. This was not unusual in the 20th-century, either. For example, my wife’s Grandma Florence had a much smaller house and family than Mary (Turck) Clark, on a good-sized Nebraska farm. To support her family of five, she tended a farm garden of about a half-acre in size throughout her adult life. The tubers, vegetables and fruits that she grew there and canned or kept in the root cellar lasted all year, until the next year’s fresh garden crops were ready.

2 thoughts on “The farm garden

  1. Thanks, Reed. Our young historians Kate and Kolby have planted the Clark House potatoes which have been sufficiently watered with our recent rain. Carol and Diana have prepared the herb garden for the season. We invite visitors to come for a tour, but also encourage them to take a walk around the house to see how summer is progressing. And, of course, Fred is working on more tree removal with the help of Kate and Kolby’s dad, Kurt.
    We are ready for our first Heritage Day – Sat. June 18
    see you all soon…Nina

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