Article ID: CBB967068905

The Early Melon and the Mechanical Gardener: Toward an Environmental History of Timekeeping in the Long Eighteenth Century (April 2017)

unapi

Imagined as accessible and portable guides to the kitchen garden, eighteenth-century garden books in the form of encyclopedias, almanacs, and calendars circulated around the Atlantic World attempting to teach gardeners in disparate regions how to interpret and transform their local environments. However, as the horticulturalists were quick to argue, no matter where the garden was located, the key to good gardening was timing: planting, grafting, weeding, and harvesting all depended on the gardener’s sense of time and knowledge of place. Encompassing garden books from the 1680s to the 1820s, and published in England, Scotland, Ireland, and the nascent United States, this article argues that gardening calendars, encyclopedias, and almanacs both in format and content composed a running debate among professional garden authors over how best to represent time on the pages of a book. During this period, scientifically minded practical gardeners wrote against mechanical and regularized time and proposed different methods for finding a more accurate and more universal organic timekeeper. The ideas they proposed, and the solutions they found, did not consciously aim for something called “modern time.” However, their proposals did emphasize the need for portability, universal application, mobility, and standardization in timekeeping technology—all features associated with modern timekeeping. In this transnational environmental history of timekeeping practices, I argue that focusing too heavily on clocks has prevented historians from understanding the myriad other technologies—like the format of a garden calendar or the practice of growing melons in a box of dung—that also contributed to the systematization and standardization of timekeeping in the long eighteenth century.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB967068905/

Similar Citations

Book Cornelis Schilt; (2021)
Isaac Newton and the Study of Chronology: Prophecy, History, and Method (/isis/citation/CBB068541582/)

Article Blondé, Bruno; Verhoeven, Gerrit; (2013)
Against the Clock: Time Awareness in Early Modern Antwerp, 1585--1789 (/isis/citation/CBB001201795/)

Book Joseph M. Adelman; (2019)
Revolutionary Networks: The Business and Politics of Printing the News, 1763–1789 (/isis/citation/CBB756772954/)

Book Carey, Daniel; Finlay, Christopher J.; (2011)
The Empire of Credit: The Financial Revolution in the British Atlantic World, 1688--1815 (/isis/citation/CBB001214720/)

Book Meacham, Sarah Hand; (2009)
Every Home a Distillery: Alcohol, Gender, and Technology in the Colonial Chesapeake (/isis/citation/CBB001020416/)

Article Page, Frederick G.; (2003)
Lime in the Early Bleaching Industry of Britain, 1633--1828: Its Prohibition and Repeal (/isis/citation/CBB000330675/)

Book Carroll, Patrick; (2006)
Science, Culture, and Modern State Formation (/isis/citation/CBB000742136/)

Book Barbara Hahn; (2020)
Technology in the Industrial Revolution (/isis/citation/CBB086776543/)

Book Schneider, Daniel; (2011)
Hybrid Nature: Sewage Treatment and the Contradictions of the Industrial Ecosystem (/isis/citation/CBB001221124/)

Book JEREMY BLACK; (2017)
Geographies of an Imperial Power: The British World, 1688–1815 (/isis/citation/CBB933331653/)

Article MacLeod, Roy; (2010)
The Royal Society and the Commonwealth: Old Friendships, New Frontiers (/isis/citation/CBB001022760/)

Book Eric Gidal; (2015)
Ossianic Unconformities: Bardic Poetry in the Industrial Age (/isis/citation/CBB803057285/)

Book Booker, John; (2007)
Maritime Quarantine: The British Experience, c.1650--1900 (/isis/citation/CBB001033018/)

Book Brückner, Martin; (2006)
The Geographic Revolution in Early America: Maps, Literacy, and National Identity (/isis/citation/CBB000651412/)

Book Unger, Nancy C.; (2012)
Beyond Nature's Housekeepers: American Women in Environmental History (/isis/citation/CBB001320951/)

Thesis Emelin Elizabeth Miller; (2019)
Empire of Ice: Arctic Natural History and British Visions of the North, 1500-1800 (/isis/citation/CBB984131524/)

Book Horrocks, Thomas A.; (2008)
Popular Print and Popular Medicine: Almanacs and Health Advice in Early America (/isis/citation/CBB001032395/)

Authors & Contributors
Miller, Emelin
Schilt, Cornelis J.
Verhoeven, Gerrit
Unger, Nancy C.
Tomlin, T. J.
Shackelford, Jole R.
Journals
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Early American Studies
Continuity and Change
Annals of Science: The History of Science and Technology
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
University of Virginia Press
University of Massachusetts Press
University of California Press
The MIT Press
Concepts
Great Britain, colonies
Environmental history
Technology
Colonialism
Almanacs
Science and society
People
Newton, Isaac
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
19th century
20th century
16th century
Places
Great Britain
United States
Ireland
North America
Atlantic world
Arctic regions
Institutions
Royal Society of London
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment