Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Food Explorer

    Page 40
    Prev Next


      Italy, Fairchild in, 20–23, 130–133, 170–172

      Itamaraca mango, 123–124

      J

      Jamaica, Fairchild and Lathrop in, 102–104

      Jannovitch (Egyptian) cotton, 135–139

      Japan. See also cherry trees

      Fairchild and Lathrop in, 190–193

      U.S.-Japan relations, 227–237

      war with China (1937), 313

      Java. See also Malay Islands

      Fairchild and Lathrop in, 140–142

      Marian Fairchild’s interest in, 241

      Jefferson, Thomas, 29, 113

      Johnson, Hiram, 264

      June Bug (biplane), 253

      K

      kale, 170–171

      “Kampong” (Fairchilds’ Florida home), 308–310, 317–318

      Kansas State University (Kansas State Agricultural College), 14, 77

      karyokinesis, 32, 34

      kava ceremony, 73

      Kellogg, John Harvey, 13

      knapsack sprayer, 18

      Knox, Philander, 230, 231

      L

      Ladies’ Garden Clubs of America, 264

      ladybugs, 220–221

      Lathrop, Barbour. See also food exploration destinations

      biographical information, 47–48, 52

      Bohemian Club home of, 48, 54–55, 76, 122, 157, 250

      characterization of, 51–55, 66–67, 82, 157, 162

      collection expedition plans of, 55–64, 74–76, 90

      death of, 310

      decline of, 249–251

      Fairchild’s first meeting with, 20–23

      Fairchild’s Java sponsorship by, 33–36, 37–38, 46–50

      on Fairchild’s marriage, 241–243

      first meeting with Marian, 214–215

      friendship with Fairchild, 156, 178, 213–214, 310

      Java sponsorship offered to Fairchild by, 33–38, 40–41, 46–50

      late life of, 308–310

      Meyer Medal awarded to, 305

      photos of, 216, 309, 323

      sexual orientation of, 48, 54–55

      tension between Wilson and, 96–98, 100–102, 128–130, 198

      as USDA “special agent,” 283

      yellow fever of, 109–110, 125–126

      Lathrop, Bryan (brother), 46–49

      Lathrop, Florence (sister), 178, 225

      Lathrop, Jedediah Hyde (father), 47–48

      Lease, Mary Elizabeth, 108

      LeDuc, William G., 30

      lemons

      Ichang lemon, 302

      Meyer lemon, 259

      seedless, 173–174

      Lili’uokalani (queen of Hawaii), 73–74

      Lincoln, Abraham, 17, 29

      Lombok (Malay Islands), Fairchild and Lathrop in, 142

      M

      USS Maine, 86–87

      Malay Islands

      Fairchild and Lathrop in, 140–147

      Fairchild’s early interest in, 19–23

      Fairchilds’ trip to (1940), 311–316

      Marian Fairchild’s interest in Java, 241

      Wallace and, 14–16

      mangoes

      carabao mango (“champagne mango”), 148

      Douglas Bennett Alphonso mango, 182–183

      growth of Florida industry, 267–268

      Itamaraca mango, 123–124

      mangosteens compared to, 190

      original Florida trees, 318

      mangosteens, 43, 62–63, 90, 190–191, 319–320

      Mario (servant), 45

      Marlatt, Charles

      biographical information, 14, 220–222

      on cherry trees, 228, 230–233, 236–237

      as Fairchild’s best man, 220

      Federal Horticultural Board, 273

      legislative efforts of, 262–268

      on Meyer’s exploration, 248, 261–262, 292

      National Geographic articles by, 269–270, 307

      Plant Quarantine Act and, 274–276

      Woodrow Wilson administration and, 272–274

      Maxim, Hudson, 298

      Mayer, Paul, 32

      McCormick, Carrie, 46, 48–50

      McCormick, Robert, 49

      McCurdy, Douglas, 252

      McKinley, William

      assassination of, 176–177

      economic problems of farmers during presidency of, 107–108

      election of (1896), 81–82, 86, 91–92

      election of (1900), 168–169

      Hawaii policy and, 66

      Philippines policy and, 147–149

      Spanish-American War and, 87

      Wilson as secretary of agriculture to, 89, 272

      Mediterranean fruit fly, 264

      Meyer, Frank

      agricultural practices researched by, 280–282

      biographical information, 244–245

      characterization of, 245–247, 258, 260, 267, 277–278

      in China, 244, 246, 247–249, 255–259, 256, 265, 274–280, 279, 292–298, 300–305

      death of, 303–305, 306

      despondency of, 291–298, 300–303

      hiring of, 243–244

      James Wilson’s approval of, 274

      Marlatt’s criticism of work by, 261–262, 265, 268–270

      Meyer Medal named for, 305

      plant pathology work of, 274–275

      Roosevelt and, 259–260

      Meyer lemon, 259

      Mitra, Rajendralal, 182

      Modern Cook, The (Francatelli), 10

      Montgomery, Robert, 311

      N

      Napheys, George, 11

      Naples, Fairchild in, 20–23

      National Agricultural Hall of Fame, 29

      National Geographic (magazine)

      Grosvenor as editor of, 194

      Marlatt’s article (1921), 307

      on Meyer’s travels, 259

      “New Plant Immigrants” (Fairchild), 270

      “Pests and Parasites” (Marlatt), 268–270

      National Geographic Society

      Bell as president of, 194–196, 268

      Fairchild’s speech to, 194–196

      inception of, 202

      location of, 206

      Scidmore and, 226

      navel oranges, 283–285, 289

      nectarines, 185

      Netherlands India Steam Navigation Company, 141

      “New Plant Immigrants” (Fairchild), 270

      Newton, Isaac (Department of Agriculture), 17

      Niemann, Albert, 115

      Nordhoff, Charles, 99

      North German Lloyd, 68

      O

      ocean travel

      accommodations of Fairchild and Lathrop, 157

      disease among passengers and, 153-154, 183–184

      in 1890s, 102

      Meyer on SS Feng Yang Maru, 303

      in 1940, 313–314

      by Popenoe, 284–285

      RMS Titanic, 278–280

      Office of Seed and Plant Introduction (USDA). See also Meyer, Frank; Popenoe, Wilson

      changing administrators of, 161–162, 174–175

      Fairchild’s early resignations from, 96–98, 99–102, 106, 128–130

      Fairchild’s final resignation from, 306–308

      Fairchild’s third hiring by, 197–198

      inception of, 88–92, 92–96

      Lathrop’s recognition by, 128–129, 305

      Los Angeles office of, 178–180

      state of exploration by (1915), 282

      Oglethorpe, James, 28

      opium poppy seeds, 293

      Oregon, Willamette Valley of, 167

      Ozaki, Yukio, 228, 234

      P

      Padua (It
    aly), Fairchild and Lathrop in, 130–133

      Page, Florence Lathrop, 178, 225

      Page, Thomas Nelson, 225

      Pakistan, Fairchild in, 185

      Pan-American Exposition (1901; Buffalo, New York), 175–177

      papaya, 123, 315

      Papua New Guinea, Fairchild and Lathrop in, 141

      pears, diseases of, 17, 19, 59

      Perrine, Henry, 93–94

      “Pests and Parasites” (Marlatt), 268–270

      Philippines

      food exploration in, 147–149, 174

      independence of, 314

      as U.S. possession, 147, 149, 169, 230–232, 272–273, 313

      pineapples, 201

      pistachios, 172–173

      Pitkin, William, 263

      places visited for food exploration. See food exploration destinations

      Plant Immigrant Bulletin, cessation of publication, 306

      plant introduction. See also agricultural practices; food exploration destinations; inspection of plants; Office of Seed and Plant Introduction (USDA); plant pathology; quarantine of plants; U.S. Department of Agriculture; individual names of fruits and vegetables

      of avocado, 116–121, 118, 120

      dehydration of food and, 287–288

      Fairchild’s and Lathrop’s early collection expedition plans, 55–64, 74–76, 90

      fruits and vegetables, defined, 25–26

      history of plant domestication, 24–28

      market acceptance required for, 13, 175, 287, 319–320

      packing and shipping methods of Fairchild, 9, 104–105, 130–131, 136–137

      plant adaptation difficulty and, 111

      plant espionage and, 3–9, 6, 38–39, 164–167, 175

      program popularity at turn of twentieth century, 179–180

      propagation process, 27, 63, 118, 161, 164, 245, 277, 284

      receiving and inventorying plants, 179, 197–198, 277, 285

      seed distribution program of U.S. government (late nineteenth century), 30, 38–39, 89

      Spanish-American War and, 88

      U.S. diet of nineteenth century and, 9–13, 60–62, 90

      plant pathology. See also quarantine of plants

      chestnut blight fungus, 262

      early USDA on, 16–20

      Fairchild on globalization benefits, 269–270

      Fairchild’s study of fungus and, 45

      inspection of plants, 222, 230–232, 263–264, 314

      Meyer’s work in, 274–275

      of pears, 17, 19, 59

      Plant Quarantine Act. See also inspection of plants; quarantine of plants

      effects on USDA, 285–288, 289–290

      inception of, 274–276

      political issues. See agricultural practices; Hawaii; McKinley, William; Philippines; quarantine of plants; Roosevelt, Teddy; Spanish-American War; Taft, William Howard; U.S. Department of Agriculture; Wilson, Woodrow; World War I

      pomelo, 146–147

      Poore, Ben Perley, 10

      Popenoe, Fred, 291

      Popenoe, Wilson

      in Brazil, 284–285, 289–290

      characterization of, 280, 282

      as Fairchild’s protégé, 275–276, 282–283

      family business of, 275, 291

      in Guatemala, 281, 291

      navel orange exploration in Brazil, 283–285

      at United Fruit Company, 307

      Populist Party, 91–92

      Poros (Greece), Fairchild in, 173–174

      potatoes, 113–114, 287

      Prinz Heinrich, 157

      processed foods, in 1870s, 12

      Progressive Farmer, The, on economic issues of agriculture, 106

      Prohibition, 166–168

      Pulitzer, Joseph, 86–88, 178

      Pumpelly, Raphael, 21, 33–34

      Q

      quarantine of plants

      Marlatt’s early legislative efforts, 262–268

      Meyer’s reaction to, 292, 296

      National Geographic articles by Marlatt and Fairchild, 268–272

      “New Plant Immigrants” (Fairchild), 270

      “Pests and Parasites” (Marlatt), 268–270

      Plant Quarantine Act, 274–276, 285–288, 289–290

      Quarantine #37, 306

      Woodrow Wilson administration and, 272–274

      Quetta nectarines, 185

      quinoa, 112–113

      R

      red corn, 114

      red strawberry spinach, 137

      rice, 152–153

      Roosevelt, Kermit, 284

      Roosevelt, Teddy

      early presidency of, 204

      foreign policy of, 227–228

      James Wilson and, 272

      presidential election of 1912 and, 264

      River of Doubt expedition by, 108, 195, 284–285

      second term of, 218, 225–226

      Selfridge and, 251

      in Spanish-American War, 88

      Rorer, Sarah Tyson, 11

      Royal Geographical Society, 199

      Royal Palm (hotel), 94

      Rural Wealth and Welfare (Fairchild), 170

      S

      Saigon, Fairchild in, 190

      St. Johnston, Alfred, 71–72

      sakura cherry trees, 224, 226, 236. See also cherry trees

      sand flies, 186

      San Francisco Morning Call, Lathrop’s job with, 47–48

      San Jose scale, 220

      Saunders, William, 283–284

      Scidmore, Eliza, 226–227, 236

      Scientific American, award for flight by, 252–254

      seedless grapes, 130–133

      seedless lemons, 173–174

      Sekar (Malay Islands), Fairchild and Lathrop in, 144–145

      Selfridge, Tom, 251–252

      Seminole Indians, Perrine and, 93–94

      Semš, Walter, 164–166

      Semš red hop, 164–168

      sesame seeds, 134

      Shepheard’s Hotel (Cairo), 133–134

      Siam (Thailand), wampi of, 67–68

      Smith, Jared, 174

      Smith, Theobald, 17

      Smithsonian Institution, 20–23, 32, 212

      Sokobin, Samuel, 304

      soybeans, 255, 278

      Spanish-American War, 85–88, 210

      spinach, 137, 255

      Spreckels, Claus, 75

      Standard Oil Company, 94, 257, 314

      star fruit, 88, 151

      Stiles, Charles Wardell, 20

      sugar, of Hawaii, 66, 73

      Sulawesi (Malay Islands), Fairchild and Lathrop in, 143

      Sultanina grapes, 130–133

      Sumatra

      Fairchild and Lathrop in, 51–60, 53, 58, 62–64

      Lathrop in (1902), 191–192

      Sumatra (steamer), 68

      Suzuki, Uhei, 223

      Swingle, Walter

      biographical information, 82–85, 83

      citrus studied by, 302

      food exploration by, 162, 174

      as National Geographic associate editor, 268

      Office of Seed and Plant Introduction inception and, 88–92

      packing and shipping methods of, 104

      T

      Taft, Helen, 227, 236

      Taft, William Howard, 149, 227–237, 228, 230, 272

      Takahira, Kogoro, 229

      Takamine, Jokichi, 235

      Taylor, W. A., 38–39

      Technical World, on food exploration, 267

      temperance movement, 166–168

      termites, Fairchild’s study of, 45–50, 57

      RMS Titanic, 278–280

      tobacco, 191–192

      tomatoes, of Jamaica, 103


      train travel, in 1890s, 99–102

      Treub, Melchior, 40, 49

      Trinidad, Fairchild and Lathrop in, 105

      True, A. C., 88–89

      typhoid fever, 154–157

      U

      United Fruit Company, 307

      United States. See also agricultural practices; Hawaii; McKinley, William; Philippines; quarantine of plants; Roosevelt, Teddy; Spanish-American War; Taft, William Howard; U.S. Department of Agriculture; Wilson, Woodrow; World War I

      Committee on Public Information, 298–299

      Department of State, 229

      diet of nineteenth century, 9–13, 60–62, 90

      Food Administration, 288

      international views of American travelers (early twentieth century), 186–188, 257, 316

      Supreme Court on food classification, 26

      U.S.-Japan relations, 227–237

      World War I entered by, 290–291, 295–296, 298–299

      World War II, 306–307, 313

      U.S. Department of Agriculture. See also inspection of plants; Office of Seed and Plant Introduction (USDA); plant pathology; quarantine of plants

      Division of Entomology, 221, 248 (See also insects)

      experiment stations in Hawaii and Puerto Rico (1902), 181

      Fairchild’s early positions and resignations, 16–20, 76–78, 81–82, 88–98, 99–102, 128–130, 161–162, 197–198

      Fairchild’s trip to Corsica for, 3–9, 6, 38–39

      farmers’ frustration with economic problems, 106–108

      growth of (1903), 197–198

      Houston as secretary of agriculture, 274–275, 306

      inception of, 16–20

      Meyer Medal, 305

      post–World War II changes to, 306–307

      presidential election of 1900 and, 169

      quinoa and, 112

      tension between Wilson and Lathrop, 96–98, 100–102, 128–130, 198

      work of, in 1890s, 63

      during World War I, 298–299

      V

      SS Vandyck, 284–285

      vegetables, defined, 25–26

      Venezuela, Fairchild and Lathrop in, 108–110

      Venice, Fairchild and Lathrop in, 126–131, 127

      W

      Wallace, Alfred Russel, 14–15, 221, 311–313

      wampi (wampee), 67–68

      Warner, Ezra, 12

      wasabi, 193

      Washington, George, 28–29

      Washington Charity Ball, 208–209

      Washington pie, 12

      Washington Society of Fine Arts, 225

      water chestnuts, 152

      Wednesday Evening salons (Bell), 196, 202, 204

      wheat, excessive crops of, 107–108

      Willamette Valley (Oregon), 167

      Wilson, James. See also U.S. Department of Agriculture

      on cherry trees shipped from Japan, 229

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026