The New York Botanical Garden is a museum of plants, an educational institution, and a scientific research organization. Founded in 1891 & now a National Historic Landmark, it is one of the greatest botanical gardens in the world. http://www.nybg.org/
It looks like we hold a copy of Westerdijk’s thesis and dissertation from the University of Zurich in the collections of the Mertz Library. She was a botanist and plant pathologist and “was one of the first women appointed as a professor in a Dutch university; she taught at the University of Utrecht from 1917 until 1952.”
I had never heard of Untermyer Gardens before this article in the New York Times. Or had I? I have certainly seen the Greystone train stop before, and often wondered what necessitated such an evocative name. And the more I thought about it, the more I was sure I had heard of him before. So I queried the Mertz Library’s digital collections. Given Greystone’s proximity to the Garden, I was hoping for tales of institutional cooperation , stories highlighting Samuel’s horticultural prowess. And while I found those, there are only hints at the magnificence of Mr. Untermyer’s palatial gardens. Here’s what I found.
According to Garden publications, Samuel Untermyer was an Annual Member of the NYBG from at least 1919 up until his death in 1940. Other entries in the Garden’s Journal document his ongoing horticultural efforts by way of his many donations of plants and seeds to NYBG, including a Strobilanthus dyerianus in 1919 and three Rex begonias in 1922. And there is one brief mention of his garden in the context of an article about a very special tree, just down the road from him. It left me feeling a little unsatisfied. I guess the only thing for it is a field trip to Greystone Station. Perhaps the ghosts (if there are any) will have more details! ~AR
Why do old books smell? The science behind that sweet pungency.
Books are made from trees. The Garden has a Library. Organic chemistry is cool. That’s all the justification I need in order to reblog this fascinating little video. ~AR
Apparently I was not the only person inside the Garden who was as taken with the video of an LP player making music from a tree cookie. Mia D’Avanza, Reference Librarian/Exhibitions Coordinator for the LuEsther T. Mertz Library was curious enough to call in the scientific big guns, in this case, James P. Ascher, Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and “techy smartypants,” who provided the following explanation:
light sensor (Arduino or otherwise) + Max/MSP (or equivalent, Ld or cSound would work too) + the hardware setup you see + clever programming to translate the light and dark of the wood into interesting MIDI signals + a nice MIDI synthesizer to produce the piano sounds = what you see; that’s why it’s in the dark!
What does “Arduino + light sensor” mean? Mr. Ascher was kind enough to include this video clip with his answer.
Some days I love my job so much. Thank you Mia and James! ~ AR
Britton was accompanied on this expedition by his wife Elizabeth Britton and Marshall Howe. They returned with about ten thousand specimens, as reported in the Notes, News and Comment section of the Journal of the New York Botanical Garden, March 1905, page 52.
Charles Millspaugh, Britton’s co-author on The Bahama Flora (1920), was also on the trip.
Source: The New York Botanical Garden’s historical photographs, in the collections of The LuEsther T. Mertz Library.
A note on the back of this photo reads: “Economic Botany Museum at the New York Botanical Garden 1905. (H.H. Rusby, Honorary Curator, Economic Botany)”.
These orchid shirts, with a design pulled from the amazing collection of the LuEsther T. Mertz Library, are fast becoming a favorite of NYBG staffers. It’s a great design, and the shirts are whisper soft. If you can’t make it to Shop in the Garden to pick one up for yourself, they’re available Online, too.