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A s
pecimen
of a cultivated grape
Herbemonte
grape from
Flushing - Long island
from Dr McDonalds
Current name: Vitis vinifera L., the variety known as "Herbemont".
Throughout his life, Ravenel was actively involved in agriculture
as well as in science. He wrote not only for scientific
publications, but also for more general readerships in the
Southern Agriculturist & Horticulturist, the Southern
Cultivator, the Southern Farmer & Market Gardener, and
Farmer and Planter. Ravenel grew an assortment of grape
varieties at Hampton Hill, near Aiken. His diary indicates, in
the summer of 1860, that he was very interested in the development
of the local fruit industry, and was himself involved in shipping
considerable amounts of peaches to New York. The Herbemonte grape
was a popular variety, growing well in the southern states.
Sorghu
m,
a potentially useful food and forage crop
Sorghum
Sept. 4 1857
found at Genl. Hammond's place
in Barnwell - said to grow wild on Savannah River.
HWR
Current name: Sorghum vulgare L.; “Cane sorghum.”
This specimen had been
widely grown as a source of sorghum molasses, and also for seed
and fodder. Ravenel almost certainly knew James H. Hammond
socially; Hammond (1807-1864), later to serve as state senator
(and governor), had been elected as a General within the local
militia, prior to the Civil War. In addition to being a rather
flamboyant political personality, Hammond was a successful
planter, and was very interested in new crops for introduction.
There are two
separate plants on this sheet, and they are likely from different
populations. The specimen was repaired in the 1930's, remounted
on period paper, and then sent to Agnes Chase for determination.
A specimen of
“Rhamie”
Boehmeria
Boehmeria [in
pencil: "tenacissima"]
Rhamie cultivated
Aiken S.C.
H.W.R.
Current name:
Boehmeria nivea (L.) Gaudich; "Rhamie."
Cultivated in
Aiken, probably collected in the 1880s. Rhamie has enjoyed a
reputation as an important fiber crop (the fibers obtained from
tissues in the stems) and it was grown with some success in 19th
Century South Carolina.
An ornamental
tree, grown in Aiken
Sterculia
platanifolia
Japan varnish
tree
Aiken S.C.
Jul 84 HWR
Current name:
Firmiana simplex Wight; “Parasol tree.”
One of Ravenel's
late collections, taken from a cultivated street tree in Aiken.
This plant is introduced from Asia, and is still commonly grown in
warmer parts of the USA. Its green bark and twigs, deeply lobed
leaves, fragrant flowers, and prominent, yellow fall foliage make
it an attractive curiosity. It still grows around Aiken, as well
as other cities in South Carolina. (It appears in a few places on
the USC campus, and around downtown Columbia.)
During the later
years of his life, Ravenel, as seen in his journal, became less and
less interested in politics, and became more devoted to his garden
and to sharing information with other botanists. He died three
years to the month after collecting this specimen.