Theodosia Burr Shepherd (October 14, 1845, Keosauqua, Iowa – September 6, 1906, Ventura, California) was an American botanist, horticulturist and pioneer in plant breeding. Called the "Flower Wizard of California,"[3] and "The Pioneer Seed-grower,"[4] Shepherd was the first woman in California, and possibly the first woman in the United States, to hybridize flowers.[3][5]
Theodosia Burr Hall was born in Keosauqua, a settlement in the Iowa Territory, on October 14, 1845.[1]
Her parents were Augustus Hall and Ellen P. (Lee) Hall.[8]
In 1854, Augustus Hall was elected as the Democratic candidate to Congress in the First District. In 1857, he became a Chief Justice of the Nebraska Territory.[9]
Theodosia grew up in Iowa, where she went to school. From 1857 to 1859, she boarded at a finishing school in Batavia, New York[8] run by Ruth Beardsley Bryan.[10]
Theodosia Burr Hall married lawyer William Edgar Shepherd[5] of Oskaloosa, Iowa, in Bellevue, Nebraska, on either September 4, 1866,[11] September 9, 1866[2] or September 4, 1867.[8]
They had four children:
Augustus H.,
Myrtle Ellen (later Lloyd,[12] later Francis),[13]
Margaret (later Oaks), and Edith (later Mrs. Fred Kelsey.)[14][15]
Theodosia suffered from tuberculosis, or "lung trouble".[16]
In 1873, the family moved to California in search of a more healthful climate.[8][7]
They settled in "Ventura-by-the-Sea,"[17] where William Edgar Shepherd became the editor of the Ventura Signal.[18]
Horticulture
Described as having "a wizard's touch in the treatment of plants and flowers,"[4] Shepherd was the first woman in California to hybridize flowers and sell their seeds.[5][19][20] At the time of her death, she was credited with being "the most noted woman in this line of work... not only in California but over all the country."[21] In 1905, one writer enthused that she was "known to every floriculturist in civilization as a hybridizer of blossoms and originator of new flowers".[5]
The work of developing a new flower began with the identification of potentially interesting "sports" of a flower, each of which was carefully raised. Then, "When the flower goes to seed, she gathers the seeds, sows them, watches and tends the resulting plants till they fructify and in like manner gathers the seeds of this second generation and garners them for planting." In addition,"hybridizing is an intensely interesting part of Mrs. Shepherd's work. She carefully selects the flowers she wishes to cross, then takes upon the tip of a little camel hair brush some of the pollen of one flower and deposits it upon the pistil of the other flower."[5] Such work involved "accurate, painstaking, patient and continuous labor".[25]
Shepherd was encouraged to consider hybridizing as a business by nurseryman Peter Henderson of New York, around 1881.[26] By 1884, she had formed the Theodosia B. Shepherd Company in Ventura, California.[6] By 1892, she was cultivating 8 acres of gardens,[6] which included a hedge of heliotrope 400 feet (120 m) long,[16] and selling seeds nationally and internationally. The business published an annual retail catalogue as well as two lists for wholesalers. The company was incorporated in 1902.[6][15]
The seed and bulb business that Theodosia established is considered to be the foundation of California’s seed industry.[7]
In addition to growing and hybrizing flowers and running a company, Theodosia wrote and lectured about plants and flowers.[19] She encouraged other women to make horticulture a profession by growing flowers and selling seeds.[26]
She was seen as an exemplar for women in the profession.[27]
Shepherd was favorably compared to Luther Burbank, a hybridizer of vegetables and fruits,[28][1] and was sometimes called "The Female Burbank" or "The Pioneer Seed-grower".[4]
Her gardens were considered "to have put Ventura on the map".[20]
Visitors to her gardens included Susan B. Anthony, Julia Ward Howe, and Washington Atlee Burpee of Burpee Seeds.[29][30][3]
"I sometimes think that we do not always choose our work, but are chosen, or called to it. It has always seemed to me that I was called into the field of flowers with a special mission for them: to grow and disseminate them, where they are loved; to write about them; to talk about them, and, most of all, to create new varieties."[19]
Later life
Theodosia Burr Shepherd died on September 6, 1906, in Ventura, California.[31][2]
She was cremated and interred in the Rosedale cemetery in Los Angeles.[21]
On December 7, 1907, William Edgar Shepherd married Theodosia's widowed sister Ella Hall Enderlein.[11]
Theodosia's daughter Myrtle Shepherd Francis inherited her business. Like her mother, Francis specialized in breeding flowers, including self-seeding doublepetunias.[17][32] Her second husband, Willard H. Francis, acted as manager.[33][34]
In 1946, Myrtle Shepherd Francis wrote a biography of her mother, entitled Theodosia: The Flower Wizard of California. Manuscript copies were left in the archives of UCLA and UC Berkeley.[3] An edited edition of the book was finally published on May 10, 2014.[13]
Remnants of Theodosia's garden still remain in Ventura. She planted a banana plant and two strawberry trees which are now in the grounds of the E. P. Foster Library.[26] The corner of Chestnut and Poli Streets, near where she lived, was designated a local historic landmark as of July 17, 1978. At that time, the only plants remaining from her garden were a Star Pine and a Bird of Paradise.[35] There have been attempts to reclaim some of the areas that were once part of Shepherd's garden as community gardens.[3][13][36]
^ abcHard, William (1906). "Women in Technical Work". The Technical World Magazine. 6: 136–137. Retrieved September 15, 2018. Mrs. Shepherd is known in California under the two titles of 'The Female Burbank' and 'The Pioneer Seed-grower'.
^ abcdefghGray, Lillian (July 7, 1905). "Women who do things: Theodosia Burr Shepherd". The Wilkes-Barre Record. Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Retrieved September 15, 2018. this quiet indefatigable woman floriculturist was the first person to grow flower seed for the eastern states' trade. Her seeds have found their way throughout Europe. She is the pioneer flower seed grower of California.
^ abcde"Women of the Horticultural World". The Pacific Garden. 5 (1): 6–7. December 1911. Retrieved September 14, 2018. On the foundation which she laid is builded the great seed industry of California.
^ abcdefgLeonard, John William, ed. (1901). "Shepherd, Theodosia Burr". Who's who in America 1901–1902. Vol. 2. Chicago: A. N. Marquis & Co. p. 1026. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
^Gue, Benjamin F. (1902). "Augustus Hall". History of Iowa From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century. Vol. 4. New York: The Century History Company. pp. 114–115. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
^ ab"Shepherd, William Edgar". Builders of our nation. Chicago, Illinois: American Publishers' Association. 1915. p. 693. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
^ ab"Theodosia B. Shepherd Company". American Florist. Vol. 18. Associated Floral Publishing Company. May 3, 1902. p. 554. Retrieved September 17, 2018.
^ abBrown, Clara Spalding (July 1895). "Midland women in California". Midland Monthly Magazine. 4 (1): 393=410. Retrieved September 14, 2018.
^Shinn, Charles Howard (October 2, 1895). "Glimpses of Ventura gardens". Garden and Forest: A Journal of Horticulture, Landscape Art and Forestry. 8: 399. Retrieved September 15, 2018.