Plants &
Gardening
Garden Stories
An All-American Salute to Our "Founding Gardeners"
Our 鈥渇ounding gardeners鈥濃 author Andrea Wulf's depiction of early U.S. presidents who passionately promoted farming as a means to independence 鈥 would be tickled to see the American Seed Saver bed in the Regenstein Fruit & Vegetable Garden. There, visitors will find varieties of heirloom fruits and vegetables grown by our third president, Thomas Jefferson, in his country estate at , just outside Charlottesville, Virginia. Many of these varieties are also grown in on the White House grounds.
Lisa Hilgenberg in Michelle Obama鈥檚 White House Kitchen Garden.
The American Seed Saver bed also honors everyday gardeners who help safeguard the genetic diversity of plants, according to Garden horticulturist Lisa Hilgenberg, who oversees the Fruit & Vegetable Garden. 鈥淏ecause of the work of home gardeners and seed-saving organizations, an increasing number of heirloom varieties are now available to the public,鈥 she said.
Heirloom vegetable varieties are open-pollinated plants that reproduce themselves, staying 鈥渢rue to their parents,鈥 according to Hilgenberg. They鈥檝e been handed down through generations, a practice that helps maintain the food crop gene pool for future generations.
The Abraham Lincoln tomato (Solanum lycopersicum 鈥楢braham Lincoln鈥) was planted in our American Seed Saver bed as a tribute to our 16th president, who established the United States Department of Agriculture more than 150 years ago. The big, sweet, and juicy tomato is a good slicer and also makes great ketchup. 鈥淲hat could be more American than that?鈥 Hilgenberg said. 鈥淥ther cultures dry their tomatoes or make paste. We鈥檙e going to put them on our burgers.鈥
Visitors to the American Seed Saver bed can also see the rattlesnake bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), said to originate from the Cherokee people. The variety is also known as the preacher bean because its abundant yield of purple-streaked green pods gives cause for thanks and praise. The nearby Painted Lady bean (Phaseolus vulgaris 鈥楶ainted Lady鈥), native to Mexico, was popular in England by the 1850s and a favorite in America by the early 1880s.
The sweet and spicy Alma Paprika pepper (Capsicum annuum 鈥楢lma Paprika鈥), of Hungarian origin, can be dried and ground into paprika and is cited in one of the earliest American cookbooks, according to Hilgenberg. In the American Seed Saver bed, the plant also serves as a symbol of America as a melting pot of cultures and traditions. 鈥淲e鈥檙e such a nation of immigrants and now we have gardens with plants from all over the world,鈥 Hilgenberg said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e made them our own.鈥
