"Remarks on the Climate in North America; With Observations upon Certain Effects of Frost in Mountainous Parts of the Country; Methods Used to Preserve Fruit Trees, by Means of Straw Conductors, Fire, Pavement, &c."

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Colonel William Tatham (1752-1819), was a soldier, lawyer, legislator, merchant, and author.[1] Born in England, he came to America to seek his fortune. Tatham participated the American Revolution and was a military courier during the British invasion of 1780-1781.[2]

Tatham traveled extensively, living in Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina, but also spending time in Cuba and Spain, and back in England. He was an acquaintance and correspondent of Thomas Jefferson.[3] Tatham was a keen observer, and wrote several works on economics and engineering, including The Political Economy of Inland Navigation, Irrigation and Drainage (London: Robert Faulder, 1799), and An Historical and Practical Essay on the Culture and Commerce of Tobacco (London: Vernor and Hood, 1800)[4]

This article, dated July 27, 1799 and published in 1800 in the Monthly Magazine, and American Review of New York, compares the climate of Europe and North America, and remarks that George Wythe, then in Richmond, Virginia, was "remarkable for his fine fruits."[5] Wythe and Jefferson often traded seeds and cuttings for vegetables and fruits.[6]

Article excerpt, June, 1800

Page 441

In respect to the radical preservation of trees and plants, I recollect to have observed a casual instance during a hard winter, where a particular tree in a row of the same kind, growth, and condition, was preserved, and shot forth with very superior luxuriance through the mere accident of its having been paved with oyster shells; probably, deposited there by the mimick industry of small children.

Upon this principle the Judge of the High Court of Chancery in Virginia, (George Wythe, Esq.) who is remarkable for his fine fruits, is said to have succeeded admirably in an experiment of planting a young orchard in the usual mode, and securing each tree respectively by passing it through the eye of a grind-stone, and breaking the several stones by the stroke of a sledge hammer, so soon as the maturity of the tree required a greater space for its expansion.

I have frequently observed a practice in the American orchards, of piling brushwood, weeds, straw, or rubbish, round the roots of fruit trees, and think it may generally be considered a useful method; and i have often seen the stumps of trees and other rubbish, set on fire with an intent to preserve the bloom (of peaches more particularly) from a frosty night. I cannot say, however, that I suppose this last method to have more than a partial capacity; nor do I know of any other place than America, where the expense would not exceed the profit.

July 27, 1799.

See also

References

  1. E. Irving Carlyle, "Tatham, William (1752-1819)," Dictionary of National Biography] (London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1898), 55:385-386.
  2. William Tatham to William Armistead Burwell, 13 June 1805.
  3. William Tatham and Elizabeth Gregory McPherson, "Letters of William Tatham," William and Mary Quarterly 16, no. 2 (April 1936), 162-191.
  4. "Colonel Tatham," Annual Biography and Obituary for 1820] (London: Longman, Hurst Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1820), 4:167.
  5. William Tatham, "Remarks on the Climate in North America; With Observations upon Certain Effects of Frost in Mountainous Parts of the Country; Methods Used to Preserve Fruit Trees, by Means of Straw Conductors, Fire, Pavement, &c.," Monthly Magazine, and American Review 2, no. 6 (June 1800), 336-441.
  6. Wythe to Thomas Jefferson, 9 March 1770; Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 24 October 1794.

External links