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Difference between revisions of "Samuel Bard"

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Like his parents, Samuel Bard was born in Philadelphia, but he grew up in New York City, where his father, Dr. John Bard, relocated his medical practice in 1746. Ten years later, while convalescing from a prolonged illness, fourteen-year-old Samuel spent the summer at Coldengham, the remote, New York farm of his father’s friend, the botanist and government offical [[Cadwallader Colden]]. During his stay, Bard received instruction in botany from [[Cadwallader Colden|Colden’s]] daughter, [[Jane Colden|Jane]], who was carrying on the project of cataloguing indigenous New York flora begun a decade earlier by her father. An accomplished draughtsman, Bard “repaid the lady for her instruction, by making figures and drawings of plants for her.” <ref> Samuel Latham Mitchill, ''A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL.D.: Late President of the New-York College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pronounced in the Public Hall, at the Request of the Trustees, on the 5th Day of Nov. 1821'' (New York: Daniel Fanshaw, 1821), 12 ; McVickar, 9-10, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/8NP6WKE8 view on Zotero].</ref> Five years later, having begun his studies at King's College in New York, Bard left America to complete his education in Britain. His ship was captured by a French privateer in November 1761 and he was held for five months, finally released through the agency of [[Benjamin Franklin]], a family friend.<ref>McVickar, 15-20, 23, </ref> After reaching London in April 1762, he followed a course of medical instruction suggested by the Quaker physician, philanthropist, and plant collector John Fothergill (1712-1780), devoting the summers to botanical investigations in the countryside.<ref> McVickar, 24-29, 37, 44</ref>  After several months, Bard transferred to the University of Edinburgh where he studied under John Hope (1725 –1786), Professor of Botany and Materia Medica and King’s Botanist. Hope had a particular interest in encouraging the study of Scottish plants, and in 1764 he awarded Bard the annual medal in botany for producing “the best herbarium or collection of dried plants, growing spontaneously within ten miles of Edinburgh.”<ref> Samuel Latham Mitchill, ''A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL.D.: Late President of the New-York College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pronounced in the Public Hall, at the Request of the Trustees, on the 5th Day of Nov. 1821'' (New York: Daniel Fanshaw, 1821), 12 ;  McVickar, 56, </ref> The "Hortus"  survived for several decades. In 1817 Bard’s former student, the physician and botanist Samuel L. Mitchill (1764-1831), presented it  to the New York Historical Society, where it joined [[David Hosack]]’s collection of duplicate specimens from the herbarium of  [[Carl Linnaeus]], as well as [[Cadwallader Colden]]’s herbarium of plants indigenous to the Highlands of New York [view text].<ref>Christine Chapman Robbins, "David Hosack’s Herbarium and Its Linnaean Specimens," ''Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society'', 104 (June 1960), 301, 302, 307, 310, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/NJE7ZUGQ view on Zotero]; “Transactions of Learned Societies,” ''The American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review'', (August 1817),  1:  287; see also 47, [https://books.google.com/books?id=lS4CAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false view on Zotero]; Mitchill, 1821, 6-7.</ref> In addition to his medical studies, Bard worked with a drawing master three hours a week. He reportedly had “a strong taste for delineation and perspective” and sketched with “exactness.”<ref>McVikar, 59</ref><span id="Hope_cite"></span> When Hope published the description of a rhubarb plant that he had successfully cultivated from seeds at the Edinburgh [[botanic garden]], he employed Bard to supplement the illustration provided by the artist William de la Cour (d. 1767) with four minutely observed botanical details ([[#Hope|view text]]).<ref>McVickar, 1822, 67, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/8NP6WKE8 view on Zotero].</ref> [Fig. 1]
 
Like his parents, Samuel Bard was born in Philadelphia, but he grew up in New York City, where his father, Dr. John Bard, relocated his medical practice in 1746. Ten years later, while convalescing from a prolonged illness, fourteen-year-old Samuel spent the summer at Coldengham, the remote, New York farm of his father’s friend, the botanist and government offical [[Cadwallader Colden]]. During his stay, Bard received instruction in botany from [[Cadwallader Colden|Colden’s]] daughter, [[Jane Colden|Jane]], who was carrying on the project of cataloguing indigenous New York flora begun a decade earlier by her father. An accomplished draughtsman, Bard “repaid the lady for her instruction, by making figures and drawings of plants for her.” <ref> Samuel Latham Mitchill, ''A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL.D.: Late President of the New-York College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pronounced in the Public Hall, at the Request of the Trustees, on the 5th Day of Nov. 1821'' (New York: Daniel Fanshaw, 1821), 12 ; McVickar, 9-10, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/8NP6WKE8 view on Zotero].</ref> Five years later, having begun his studies at King's College in New York, Bard left America to complete his education in Britain. His ship was captured by a French privateer in November 1761 and he was held for five months, finally released through the agency of [[Benjamin Franklin]], a family friend.<ref>McVickar, 15-20, 23, </ref> After reaching London in April 1762, he followed a course of medical instruction suggested by the Quaker physician, philanthropist, and plant collector John Fothergill (1712-1780), devoting the summers to botanical investigations in the countryside.<ref> McVickar, 24-29, 37, 44</ref>  After several months, Bard transferred to the University of Edinburgh where he studied under John Hope (1725 –1786), Professor of Botany and Materia Medica and King’s Botanist. Hope had a particular interest in encouraging the study of Scottish plants, and in 1764 he awarded Bard the annual medal in botany for producing “the best herbarium or collection of dried plants, growing spontaneously within ten miles of Edinburgh.”<ref> Samuel Latham Mitchill, ''A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL.D.: Late President of the New-York College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pronounced in the Public Hall, at the Request of the Trustees, on the 5th Day of Nov. 1821'' (New York: Daniel Fanshaw, 1821), 12 ;  McVickar, 56, </ref> The "Hortus"  survived for several decades. In 1817 Bard’s former student, the physician and botanist Samuel L. Mitchill (1764-1831), presented it  to the New York Historical Society, where it joined [[David Hosack]]’s collection of duplicate specimens from the herbarium of  [[Carl Linnaeus]], as well as [[Cadwallader Colden]]’s herbarium of plants indigenous to the Highlands of New York [view text].<ref>Christine Chapman Robbins, "David Hosack’s Herbarium and Its Linnaean Specimens," ''Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society'', 104 (June 1960), 301, 302, 307, 310, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/NJE7ZUGQ view on Zotero]; “Transactions of Learned Societies,” ''The American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review'', (August 1817),  1:  287; see also 47, [https://books.google.com/books?id=lS4CAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false view on Zotero]; Mitchill, 1821, 6-7.</ref> In addition to his medical studies, Bard worked with a drawing master three hours a week. He reportedly had “a strong taste for delineation and perspective” and sketched with “exactness.”<ref>McVikar, 59</ref><span id="Hope_cite"></span> When Hope published the description of a rhubarb plant that he had successfully cultivated from seeds at the Edinburgh [[botanic garden]], he employed Bard to supplement the illustration provided by the artist William de la Cour (d. 1767) with four minutely observed botanical details ([[#Hope|view text]]).<ref>McVickar, 1822, 67, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/8NP6WKE8 view on Zotero].</ref> [Fig. 1]
  
After completing his medical degree in 1765, Bard returned to America and entered into a professional partnership with his father in New York City. The following year he developed the plan for a medical school at King’s College in New York, where he served until the outbreak of war in 1776 as dean and professor of the theory and practice of physic. Thereafter, the college was renamed Columbia, and in addition to serving as a trustee (1787-1804) and dean of the medical faculty (1791-1804), Bard taught chemistry (1784-1787) and natural philosophy and astronomy (1785-1786).<ref>''Catalogue of Columbia College, in the City of New-York; Embracing the Names of Its Trustees, Officers, and Graduates'' (New York: Columbia College, 1844), 8, 13, 17, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/MJAWNGN9 view on Zotero]</ref> In 1811, four years after the College of Physicians and Surgeons was founded in New York. Bard was appointed its president, serving in that capacity until his death in 1821.<ref>“The Early History of Medicine in New York. Part II,” ''Americana'', 9 (1914): 1011, 1014-15, 1020, 1021, 1024, 1025, .</ref> In 1769 Bard began campaigning for the city’s first public hospital, leading his fellow physicians [[Peter Middleton]] and [[John Jones]] in petitioning [[Cadwallader Colden]], then Lieutenant Governor of New York, for a charter of incorporation. Bard's mentor, John Fothergill, spearheaded fundraising for the hospital in Britain, and a royal charter was granted by George III in 1771.<ref>''An Account of the New-York Hospital'' (New York: Collins & Co., 1811), 3-4, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/64Q6DV2I view on Zotero]; Marynita Anderson Nolosco, ''Physician Heal Thyself: Medical Practitioners of Eighteenth-Century New York'' (New York: Peter Lang, 2004), 14, 87-88, 119-20, 125, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/BHB3MD5Z view on Zotero].</ref> Delayed by a fire and war, the hospital did not open until 1791. Bard reportedly laid out a [[botanic garden]] occupying two city blocks adjacent to the hospital, in which he cultivated medicinal herbs.<ref>Langstaff, 181</ref> He may also have contributed to the design of the hospital grounds, <span id="Brief_cite"></span>which in 1801 were "inclosed with a brick [[wall]] and converted into gardens for the accommodation and benefit of convalescent patients" and "planted with fruit and forest trees" ([[#Brief|view text]]). New York was then the seat of the American government and Bard served as [[George Washington]]’s private physician, having saved the recently inaugurated president’s life in 1789 by removing a malignancy in his thigh.<ref>George Washington, ''The Papers of George Washington'', ed. Dorothy Twohig, Mark A. Mastromarino, and Jack D. Warren, Presidential Series, 16 vols. (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1996), 393–400, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/QQ462GQ6 view on Zotero].</ref> Bard also engaged in the cultural life of the city in his capacity as trustee (1769-1776, 1788-1793, 1796) and secretary (1769-1776, 1788-1789) of the New York Society Library.<ref>Austin Baxter Keep, ''History of the New York Society Library'' (New York: De Vinne Press, 1908), 130, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/EHECFHJV view on Zotero].</ref>
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After completing his medical degree in 1765, Bard returned to America and entered into a professional partnership with his father in New York City. The following year he developed the plan for a medical school at King’s College in New York, where he served as dean and professor of the theory and practice of physic until the outbreak of war in 1776. In 1769 Bard began campaigning for the city’s first public hospital, leading his fellow physicians [[Peter Middleton]] and [[John Jones]] in petitioning [[Cadwallader Colden]], then Lieutenant Governor of New York, for a charter of incorporation. Bard's mentor, John Fothergill, spearheaded fundraising for the hospital in Britain, and a royal charter was granted by George III in 1771.<ref>''An Account of the New-York Hospital'' (New York: Collins & Co., 1811), 3-4, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/64Q6DV2I view on Zotero]; Marynita Anderson Nolosco, ''Physician Heal Thyself: Medical Practitioners of Eighteenth-Century New York'' (New York: Peter Lang, 2004), 14, 87-88, 119-20, 125, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/BHB3MD5Z view on Zotero].</ref>Following the American victory in 1782, the college was renamed Columbia and although his political sympathies had lain with Britain, Bard continued to play an active role in developing the medical faculty. In addition to serving as a trustee (1787-1804) and dean (1791-1804), he taught chemistry (1784-1787) and natural philosophy and astronomy (1785-1786).<ref>''Catalogue of Columbia College, in the City of New-York; Embracing the Names of Its Trustees, Officers, and Graduates'' (New York: Columbia College, 1844), 8, 13, 17, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/MJAWNGN9 view on Zotero]</ref> In 1811, four years after the College of Physicians and Surgeons was founded in New York, Bard was appointed its president, serving in that capacity until his death in 1821.<ref>“The Early History of Medicine in New York. Part II,” ''Americana'', 9 (1914): 1011, 1014-15, 1020, 1021, 1024, 1025, .</ref>  Delayed by a fire and war, the hospital did not open until 1791. Bard reportedly laid out a [[botanic garden]] occupying two city blocks adjacent to the hospital, in which he cultivated medicinal herbs.<ref>Langstaff, 181</ref> He may also have contributed to the design of the hospital grounds, <span id="Brief_cite"></span>which in 1801 were "inclosed with a brick [[wall]] and converted into gardens for the accommodation and benefit of convalescent patients" and "planted with fruit and forest trees" ([[#Brief|view text]]). New York was then the seat of the American government and Bard served as [[George Washington]]’s private physician, having saved the recently inaugurated president’s life in 1789 by removing a malignancy in his thigh.<ref>George Washington, ''The Papers of George Washington'', ed. Dorothy Twohig, Mark A. Mastromarino, and Jack D. Warren, Presidential Series, 16 vols. (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1996), 393–400, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/QQ462GQ6 view on Zotero].</ref> Bard also engaged in the cultural life of the city in his capacity as trustee (1769-1776, 1788-1793, 1796) and secretary (1769-1776, 1788-1789) of the New York Society Library.<ref>Austin Baxter Keep, ''History of the New York Society Library'' (New York: De Vinne Press, 1908), 130, [https://www.zotero.org/groups/54737/items/itemKey/EHECFHJV view on Zotero].</ref>
  
 
At his house on Broad Street in New York City, Bard maintained a garden and [[conservatory]] filled with exotic plants, which he later told his son-in-law, John McVickar (1787-1868) had served “as a specific [i.e., remedy] against the petty cares and anxieties of life,” <span id="McVickar_155_cite"> for "nothing calmed and soothed his mind like a walk among his plants and flowers" ([[#McVickar_155|view text]]). The opportunity to lay out gardens on a more extensive scale figured among the attractions that led Bard to establish a residence outside of the city near his father’s estate of Hyde Park. <ref> McVickar, 158-59</ref> With the expectation of entering semi-retirement, Bard formed a partnership in 1796 with [[David Hosack]], a fellow physician based in New York, who took over much of Bard’s case load.<ref>McVickar, 1822, 164, </ref> Bard settled at Hyde Park in the spring of 1798 and apart from occasional trips to the city, spent the majority of his time carrying out landscaping improvements and botanical experiments. <ref> McVickar, 167</ref> He often foraged in the woods with his son William (1776-1853), filling his pockets with plants for study, adopting an idiosyncratic curriculum incorporating lessons in botanical drawing, nature poetry, and the taxonomic system of [[Carl Linnaeus]]. [view text] In 1806 Bard founded the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture, serving as the group’s first president <ref>’’Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’’ (Poughkeepsie: Bowman, Parsons and Potter, 1807), 1: 5, 8-18</ref> In 1807 he delivered an address to the Society “On the Rotation of Crops,” in which he laid out “a short account of the reasoning and practice of the best English farmers, on this subject; and to endeavour in some measure to adapt them to our soil and climate, and to such other circumstances, as necessarily conrol our practice.” <ref>Samuel Bard, “On the Rotation of Crops, ’’Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’’  40-48, </ref> He reportedly corresponded with the noted Philadelphia agriculturalist, [[Richard Peters]], on the use of clover grass as a crop and gypsum as a manure. <ref>McVickars, 182-83; see also William Bard’s letter to the Secretary of the Society, ‘Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’, 2 vols. (Poughkeepsie: Paraclete Potter, 1809): 39-48</ref> In the 1770s he had begun cultivating a grove of locust, or Acacia, trees (Robinia pseudoacacia) at Hyde Park with the expectation that they would provide valuable timber. He observed in a letter: “We have been planting a fortune for our children, &mdash; a great quantity of locust seed; our farm is to be one great forest of locust trees.”<ref>McVickar, 184</ref> Bard’s method of successfully germinating the seeds of a tree indigenous to the south first appeared in The American Farmer in 1824, and was subsequently republished in other agricultural journals. <ref> Dr. S. Ackerly, ‘Remarks on the Cultivation of the Locust Tree’, The American Farmer, Containing Original Essays and Selections on Agriculture, Horticulture, Rural and Domestic Economy, and Internal Improvements, 5 (1824), 396.</ref>
 
At his house on Broad Street in New York City, Bard maintained a garden and [[conservatory]] filled with exotic plants, which he later told his son-in-law, John McVickar (1787-1868) had served “as a specific [i.e., remedy] against the petty cares and anxieties of life,” <span id="McVickar_155_cite"> for "nothing calmed and soothed his mind like a walk among his plants and flowers" ([[#McVickar_155|view text]]). The opportunity to lay out gardens on a more extensive scale figured among the attractions that led Bard to establish a residence outside of the city near his father’s estate of Hyde Park. <ref> McVickar, 158-59</ref> With the expectation of entering semi-retirement, Bard formed a partnership in 1796 with [[David Hosack]], a fellow physician based in New York, who took over much of Bard’s case load.<ref>McVickar, 1822, 164, </ref> Bard settled at Hyde Park in the spring of 1798 and apart from occasional trips to the city, spent the majority of his time carrying out landscaping improvements and botanical experiments. <ref> McVickar, 167</ref> He often foraged in the woods with his son William (1776-1853), filling his pockets with plants for study, adopting an idiosyncratic curriculum incorporating lessons in botanical drawing, nature poetry, and the taxonomic system of [[Carl Linnaeus]]. [view text] In 1806 Bard founded the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture, serving as the group’s first president <ref>’’Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’’ (Poughkeepsie: Bowman, Parsons and Potter, 1807), 1: 5, 8-18</ref> In 1807 he delivered an address to the Society “On the Rotation of Crops,” in which he laid out “a short account of the reasoning and practice of the best English farmers, on this subject; and to endeavour in some measure to adapt them to our soil and climate, and to such other circumstances, as necessarily conrol our practice.” <ref>Samuel Bard, “On the Rotation of Crops, ’’Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’’  40-48, </ref> He reportedly corresponded with the noted Philadelphia agriculturalist, [[Richard Peters]], on the use of clover grass as a crop and gypsum as a manure. <ref>McVickars, 182-83; see also William Bard’s letter to the Secretary of the Society, ‘Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’, 2 vols. (Poughkeepsie: Paraclete Potter, 1809): 39-48</ref> In the 1770s he had begun cultivating a grove of locust, or Acacia, trees (Robinia pseudoacacia) at Hyde Park with the expectation that they would provide valuable timber. He observed in a letter: “We have been planting a fortune for our children, &mdash; a great quantity of locust seed; our farm is to be one great forest of locust trees.”<ref>McVickar, 184</ref> Bard’s method of successfully germinating the seeds of a tree indigenous to the south first appeared in The American Farmer in 1824, and was subsequently republished in other agricultural journals. <ref> Dr. S. Ackerly, ‘Remarks on the Cultivation of the Locust Tree’, The American Farmer, Containing Original Essays and Selections on Agriculture, Horticulture, Rural and Domestic Economy, and Internal Improvements, 5 (1824), 396.</ref>

Revision as of 19:15, August 25, 2015

Samuel Bard (April 1, 1742–May 24, 1821), was a professional physician and amateur botanist who designed several gardens in New York, including that at his country estate, Hyde Park.

History

Fig. 1, William de la Cour and Samuel Bard, Rheum Palmaatum Linn., detail, 1765, Philosophical Transactions, vol. 55, Plate XIII.

Like his parents, Samuel Bard was born in Philadelphia, but he grew up in New York City, where his father, Dr. John Bard, relocated his medical practice in 1746. Ten years later, while convalescing from a prolonged illness, fourteen-year-old Samuel spent the summer at Coldengham, the remote, New York farm of his father’s friend, the botanist and government offical Cadwallader Colden. During his stay, Bard received instruction in botany from Colden’s daughter, Jane, who was carrying on the project of cataloguing indigenous New York flora begun a decade earlier by her father. An accomplished draughtsman, Bard “repaid the lady for her instruction, by making figures and drawings of plants for her.” [1] Five years later, having begun his studies at King's College in New York, Bard left America to complete his education in Britain. His ship was captured by a French privateer in November 1761 and he was held for five months, finally released through the agency of Benjamin Franklin, a family friend.[2] After reaching London in April 1762, he followed a course of medical instruction suggested by the Quaker physician, philanthropist, and plant collector John Fothergill (1712-1780), devoting the summers to botanical investigations in the countryside.[3] After several months, Bard transferred to the University of Edinburgh where he studied under John Hope (1725 –1786), Professor of Botany and Materia Medica and King’s Botanist. Hope had a particular interest in encouraging the study of Scottish plants, and in 1764 he awarded Bard the annual medal in botany for producing “the best herbarium or collection of dried plants, growing spontaneously within ten miles of Edinburgh.”[4] The "Hortus" survived for several decades. In 1817 Bard’s former student, the physician and botanist Samuel L. Mitchill (1764-1831), presented it to the New York Historical Society, where it joined David Hosack’s collection of duplicate specimens from the herbarium of Carl Linnaeus, as well as Cadwallader Colden’s herbarium of plants indigenous to the Highlands of New York [view text].[5] In addition to his medical studies, Bard worked with a drawing master three hours a week. He reportedly had “a strong taste for delineation and perspective” and sketched with “exactness.”[6] When Hope published the description of a rhubarb plant that he had successfully cultivated from seeds at the Edinburgh botanic garden, he employed Bard to supplement the illustration provided by the artist William de la Cour (d. 1767) with four minutely observed botanical details (view text).[7] [Fig. 1]

After completing his medical degree in 1765, Bard returned to America and entered into a professional partnership with his father in New York City. The following year he developed the plan for a medical school at King’s College in New York, where he served as dean and professor of the theory and practice of physic until the outbreak of war in 1776. In 1769 Bard began campaigning for the city’s first public hospital, leading his fellow physicians Peter Middleton and John Jones in petitioning Cadwallader Colden, then Lieutenant Governor of New York, for a charter of incorporation. Bard's mentor, John Fothergill, spearheaded fundraising for the hospital in Britain, and a royal charter was granted by George III in 1771.[8]Following the American victory in 1782, the college was renamed Columbia and although his political sympathies had lain with Britain, Bard continued to play an active role in developing the medical faculty. In addition to serving as a trustee (1787-1804) and dean (1791-1804), he taught chemistry (1784-1787) and natural philosophy and astronomy (1785-1786).[9] In 1811, four years after the College of Physicians and Surgeons was founded in New York, Bard was appointed its president, serving in that capacity until his death in 1821.[10] Delayed by a fire and war, the hospital did not open until 1791. Bard reportedly laid out a botanic garden occupying two city blocks adjacent to the hospital, in which he cultivated medicinal herbs.[11] He may also have contributed to the design of the hospital grounds, which in 1801 were "inclosed with a brick wall and converted into gardens for the accommodation and benefit of convalescent patients" and "planted with fruit and forest trees" (view text). New York was then the seat of the American government and Bard served as George Washington’s private physician, having saved the recently inaugurated president’s life in 1789 by removing a malignancy in his thigh.[12] Bard also engaged in the cultural life of the city in his capacity as trustee (1769-1776, 1788-1793, 1796) and secretary (1769-1776, 1788-1789) of the New York Society Library.[13]

At his house on Broad Street in New York City, Bard maintained a garden and conservatory filled with exotic plants, which he later told his son-in-law, John McVickar (1787-1868) had served “as a specific [i.e., remedy] against the petty cares and anxieties of life,” for "nothing calmed and soothed his mind like a walk among his plants and flowers" (view text). The opportunity to lay out gardens on a more extensive scale figured among the attractions that led Bard to establish a residence outside of the city near his father’s estate of Hyde Park. [14] With the expectation of entering semi-retirement, Bard formed a partnership in 1796 with David Hosack, a fellow physician based in New York, who took over much of Bard’s case load.[15] Bard settled at Hyde Park in the spring of 1798 and apart from occasional trips to the city, spent the majority of his time carrying out landscaping improvements and botanical experiments. [16] He often foraged in the woods with his son William (1776-1853), filling his pockets with plants for study, adopting an idiosyncratic curriculum incorporating lessons in botanical drawing, nature poetry, and the taxonomic system of Carl Linnaeus. [view text] In 1806 Bard founded the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture, serving as the group’s first president [17] In 1807 he delivered an address to the Society “On the Rotation of Crops,” in which he laid out “a short account of the reasoning and practice of the best English farmers, on this subject; and to endeavour in some measure to adapt them to our soil and climate, and to such other circumstances, as necessarily conrol our practice.” [18] He reportedly corresponded with the noted Philadelphia agriculturalist, Richard Peters, on the use of clover grass as a crop and gypsum as a manure. [19] In the 1770s he had begun cultivating a grove of locust, or Acacia, trees (Robinia pseudoacacia) at Hyde Park with the expectation that they would provide valuable timber. He observed in a letter: “We have been planting a fortune for our children, — a great quantity of locust seed; our farm is to be one great forest of locust trees.”[20] Bard’s method of successfully germinating the seeds of a tree indigenous to the south first appeared in The American Farmer in 1824, and was subsequently republished in other agricultural journals. [21]


Texts

  • Bard, Samuel, April 1, 1764, letter from Edinburgh to John Bard (McVickar, 1822: 57-58)[22]

"I heartily wish I could be with you at laying out your grounds, as I imagine I could be of some assistance, although I may find it impossible to convey my notions upon that subject in writing. From what I have as yet seen, I find those the most beautiful where nature is suffered to be our guide. The principal things to be observed in planning a pleasure ground, seem to me, to be the situation of the ground, and the storms and winds the country is most liable to. By the first, I mean, to distribute my plants according to the soil they most delight in; to place such as flourish most in a warm exposure and dry soil, upon the sunny side of a hill; while such as delight in the shade and moist ground, should be placed in the vallies. By this single precaution, one of the greatest beauties of a garden is obtained, which consists in the health and vigour of the plants which compose it. By considering well the predominant winds and storms of the country, we are directed where to plant our large trees, so that they shall be at once an ornament, and afford a useful shelter to the smaller and more delicate plants. Next I think straight lines should be particularly avoided except where they serve to lead the eye to some distant and beautiful object—serpentine walks are much more agreeable. Another object deserving of attention seems to be, to place the most beautiful and striking objects, such as water, if possible, a handsome green-house, a grove of flowering shrubs, or a remarkably fine tree, in such situations, that from the house they may almost all be seen; but to a person walking, they should be artfully concealed until he suddenly, and unexpectedly, comes upon them; so that by the surprise, the pleasure may be increased: and if possible, I would contrive them so that they should contrast each other, which again greatly increases their beauty. The last thing I should mention, which, indeed, is not the least worthy of notice, is, to throw the flower garden, kitchen, and fruit garden, and if possible, the whole farm, into one, so that they may appear as links of the same chain, and may mutually contribute to the beauties of the whole. If you could send me an accurate plan of the situation of your ground, describing particularly the hollows, risings, and the opportunities you have of bringing water into it, the spot where you intend your house, and the situation of your orchard, I would consult some of my friends here about a proper plan, and I believe I know some who would assist us, and as I cannot obtain your gardener before November, if you sent the plan immediately, I shall be able to return it by him.

“In my last letter I sent you one from Dr. Hope, informing you of my having the prize; he has done me the honour to write also to Dr. Franklin upon the subject. He has also desired me to acquaint you, that a number of gentlemen here have formed themselves into an association for the importation of American seeds and plants, and would be much obliged to you to recommend a proper person as a correspondent.

“I know of no one who would answer so well as Mr. Bartram.”


  • Bard, Samuel, June 8, 1764, letter from London to John Bard (McVickar, 1822: 61)[22]
“I have lately received great pleasure and improvement in reading Lord Kames’s late work, and recommend it to your perusal, especially that part of it relating to gardening and architecture, before you go on in improving your place on the north river. He most justly condemns the cutting of gardens into formal parterres, or forcing nature in any respect; at the same time, points out, in a beautiful and philosophical manner, where we are implicitly to follow this amiable mistress, and when and how we may improve, by modest dress, her native beauties."


  • Bard, John, February 16, 1765, letter from New York to Samuel Bard in London (McVickar, 1822 McVickar, 1822: 67)
"With respect to your dedication to the governor [ Cadwallader Colden ], I wish you to remember, he is an old gentleman who likes respect, but is impatient of adulation. I think I would make it very short: mention your first instruction in botany, which is a branch of medicine, to have been received from him; and with an honest and plan expression of gratitude acknowledge his instances of kindness to you, and offer the dedication of your Thesis as a public testimony of that gratitude."


  • Hope, John, September 24, 1765, letter to John Pringle describing rhubarb plant (Philosophical Transactions, 1766: 290)[23]back up to history
“In autumn 1763, I received from Doctor Mounsey the seeds of the Rheum palmatum, which he assured me were the seeds of the true Rhubarb. I sowed them immediately in the open ground in the Botanic garden. In the beginning of May last, one of the plants from these seeds pushed up a flowering stem, and about the middle of the month, the flowers began to open, and continued in great beauty till the 8th of 9th of June….

“I employed Mr. [William] De la Cour to made the drawings, who, though a good painter, is no botanist; this defect was fully supplied by Mr. Samuel Bard of New York, student in this university, who made the drawings of the fructification in plate XIII. Fig. 4. a, a, a, b, c, d....

"aaa florem; b pistillum (sed non satis explicatum); c semen maturum; d sectionem transversam ejusdem exhibtent, magnitudine naturali."[Fig. 1]


  • Bard, Samuel, March 16, 1766, letter from London to Mary Bard (McVickar, 1822: 86-87)[22]
"Were I a man of fortune… I would have… in my gardens, alcoves and temples dedicated to the memory of my best friends, and adorned with their portraits. By these means, I could never experience the fatigue of being tired of myself; for thus I could always enjoy the choicest company, without the interruption of idle intruders."


  • Bard, Samuel, July 22, 1776, letter from New York to Mary Bard at Hyde Park (McVickar, 1822: 106)[22]
“My little garden is in full luxuriance; it looks really beautiful, but alone, I cannot enjoy it. Oh! How I long for the time when we shall chase our little folks around the walks, and together cultivate and adorn it.”


"The grounds belonging to the [New York] Hospital were, in 1801, inclosed with a brick wall and converted into gardens for the accommodation and benefit of convalescent patients....

"The site of the hospital is elevated, and is one of the most agreeable on New-York Island.... The gardens are planted with fruit and forest trees, and afford agreeable refreshing walks to valetudinary and convalescent patients; the situation being high, open and airy, possesses extraordinary advantages for the enjoyment of fresh and salubrious breezes."


  • An Account of the New-York Hospital, 1811 (1811: 11) [25]
"The edifice is crowned with a handsome cupola, which affords a most extensive and picturesque view of the city, harbour and adjacent country. There is an excellent kitchen-garden, and the grounds are laid out in walks, planted with fruit and ornamental trees, for the benefit of convalescent patients. There is also a large and well constructed ice-house, a bathing house, and convenient stables."


  • Bard, Samuel, December 25, 1820, letter from Hyde Park to his son (McVickar, 1822, 236-37)
“I walk, ride, and amuse myself, out of doors with my green-house, and in doors, with my little transparent orrery; to which I am contemplating some additions and familiar illustrations.

“My green-house and flower-stands afford me considerable amusement. The plants flourish exceedingly: I spent two hours among them yesterday, and shall do so occasionally this winter…. Every plant, from the royal orange and myrtle to the humble crocus, in fragrance, grace, and beauty, performer their part to admiration: and although they excite no passion of fear or mirth, of love or alarm, yet they do better, — they calm all my passions, sooth disappointment, and even mitigate the feelings of sorrow.”


  • Bard, Samuel, n.d. [c. 1820], letter to an unknown correspondent (McVickar: 1822: 237)
“I…now begin to enjoy the spring by riding on horseback, and amusing myself in my garden; but I do both with caution. When it is fair over head, but damp under foot, I ride my poney into the garden to give directions, and to see my plants bursting in to life, in which I take great delight.

“I have several beautiful and rare plants coming forward; and I watch their progress with an interest which, by many people, would be thought trifling in a man of four score: but I appease my conscience by the innocency of the pursuit, and my inability for such as are more active.”


  • Mitchill, Samuel Latham, November 5, 1821, "A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard" (Mitchill: 1821: 12-13)[26]
“With the intention of encouraging the study of Scottish plants, and particularly of stimulating young gentlemen at the university to search for them and to know them, Dr. Hope offered a gold medal as a premium for the best herbarium or collection of dried plants, growing spontaneously within ten miles of Edinburgh. Bard obtained this testimonial of superior skill, in collecting, arranging, and preserving the vegetable species of that vicinity. It is reported that he had received the rudiments of the science from Miss Colden, daughter of Dr. Colden...; and that he had repaid the young lady for her instruction, by making figures and drawings of plants for her. It hence appears that before he left home, he was a tolerable proficient in that useful and charming art....

“A book of the plants then exhibited, is yet extant. It was presented to me some years ago, by Charles Boxton, M.D. It is a large folio, in strong binding, and lettered E plantis circa Edinam natis. C. By the letter C, it would seem that it was only one of several; or, that at least there were two more; of this, however, I am uninformed. The present volume contains about one hundred plants, glued to sheets of white paper, and these laid between larger sheets of purple paper. Their scientific names, their places of growth, and the season of gathering, are distinctly written on the opposite page. They are mostly in good preservation, after a lapse of fifty-seven years. In particular, the Conium maculatum, Parnassia palustris, Alisma plantago, AEsculus hippocastanum, Fragaria vesca, Geum rivale, Agrimonia eupatoria, Spiraea filipendula, Rubus idaeus, Papaver rhaeas, Stachys sylvatica, and Urtica diocia, look exceedingly natural.”


  • McVickar, John, 1822, A Domestic Narrative of the Life of Samuel Bard, M. D., LL. D. (1822: 155) [27]
"As a relaxation from business, Dr. Bard peculiarly prized the enjoyment of his garden and conservatory, which were stored with the choicest native and exotic plants. The pleasure he took in them was almost a peculiar sense: nor was it to him, as he asserted, without its moral uses. He has often told the writer, that nothing calmed and soothed his mind like a walk among his plants and flowers; and that he used it as a specific against the petty cares and anxieties of life.”


  • Bard, William c. 1822, on botanical instruction from his father, Samuel Bard (1822: 181-82)[28]
"The principal part of my instruction he took upon himself.... Our studies [of drawing and botany] generally ended with a walk in the woods, or a scramble among the rocks, in which I delighted to follow him. His pockets, on such excursions, were generally filled with such new plants as we could collect; affording a botanical lesson for the day, and specimens for future illustration. I had a little of his own fondness for drawing and plants, and look back with delight on the pleasure and employment I thus afforded him. An illustration of the system of Linnaeus, and subsequently, of Miss [Frances Arabella] Rowden’s botany [A Poetical Introduction to the Study of Botany (1801)], was the manner in which he made me unite these studies; ornamenting every page or two with a group or basket of flowers, with some appropriate sentence, either from Scripture, or our best poets...."

Images

References

New York Public Library circulation records for Samuel Bard

Exotic Plant Inventory, Landscape Survey, and Invasiveness Assessment: Roosevelt-Vanderbilt National Historic Sites, Hyde Park, NY


Notes

  1. Samuel Latham Mitchill, A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL.D.: Late President of the New-York College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pronounced in the Public Hall, at the Request of the Trustees, on the 5th Day of Nov. 1821 (New York: Daniel Fanshaw, 1821), 12 ; McVickar, 9-10, view on Zotero.
  2. McVickar, 15-20, 23,
  3. McVickar, 24-29, 37, 44
  4. Samuel Latham Mitchill, A Discourse on the Life and Character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL.D.: Late President of the New-York College of Physicians and Surgeons; Pronounced in the Public Hall, at the Request of the Trustees, on the 5th Day of Nov. 1821 (New York: Daniel Fanshaw, 1821), 12 ; McVickar, 56,
  5. Christine Chapman Robbins, "David Hosack’s Herbarium and Its Linnaean Specimens," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 104 (June 1960), 301, 302, 307, 310, view on Zotero; “Transactions of Learned Societies,” The American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review, (August 1817), 1: 287; see also 47, view on Zotero; Mitchill, 1821, 6-7.
  6. McVikar, 59
  7. McVickar, 1822, 67, view on Zotero.
  8. An Account of the New-York Hospital (New York: Collins & Co., 1811), 3-4, view on Zotero; Marynita Anderson Nolosco, Physician Heal Thyself: Medical Practitioners of Eighteenth-Century New York (New York: Peter Lang, 2004), 14, 87-88, 119-20, 125, view on Zotero.
  9. Catalogue of Columbia College, in the City of New-York; Embracing the Names of Its Trustees, Officers, and Graduates (New York: Columbia College, 1844), 8, 13, 17, view on Zotero
  10. “The Early History of Medicine in New York. Part II,” Americana, 9 (1914): 1011, 1014-15, 1020, 1021, 1024, 1025, .
  11. Langstaff, 181
  12. George Washington, The Papers of George Washington, ed. Dorothy Twohig, Mark A. Mastromarino, and Jack D. Warren, Presidential Series, 16 vols. (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1996), 393–400, view on Zotero.
  13. Austin Baxter Keep, History of the New York Society Library (New York: De Vinne Press, 1908), 130, view on Zotero.
  14. McVickar, 158-59
  15. McVickar, 1822, 164,
  16. McVickar, 167
  17. ’’Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’’ (Poughkeepsie: Bowman, Parsons and Potter, 1807), 1: 5, 8-18
  18. Samuel Bard, “On the Rotation of Crops, ’’Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’’ 40-48,
  19. McVickars, 182-83; see also William Bard’s letter to the Secretary of the Society, ‘Transactions of the Society of Dutchess County for the Promotion of Agriculture’, 2 vols. (Poughkeepsie: Paraclete Potter, 1809): 39-48
  20. McVickar, 184
  21. Dr. S. Ackerly, ‘Remarks on the Cultivation of the Locust Tree’, The American Farmer, Containing Original Essays and Selections on Agriculture, Horticulture, Rural and Domestic Economy, and Internal Improvements, 5 (1824), 396.
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 John McVickar, A Domestic Narrative of the Life of Samuel Bard, M. D., LL. D. (New York: A. Paul, 1822), view on Zotero Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "McVickar" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "McVickar" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "McVickar" defined multiple times with different content
  23. "Extract of a Letter from Dr. John Hope, Professor of Medicine and Botany in the University of Edinburgh, to Dr. Pringle; dated Edinburgh, 24 September 1765. Read Nov. 7, 1765", Philosophical Transactions, Giving Some Account of the Present Undertakings, Studies, and Labours of the Ingenious, in Many Considerable Parts of the World...for the Year 1765 (London: L. Davis and C. Reymers, Printers to the Royal Society, 1766), 290, 293, view on Zotero.
  24. A Brief Account of the New-York Hospital (New York: Isaac Collins & Son, 1804), view on Zotero
  25. An Account of the New-York Hospital (New York: Collins & Co., 1811), view on Zotero
  26. Mitchill, 1821,
  27. McVickar, 1822, view on Zotero.
  28. McVickar, 1822

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