From their arrival in the 17th century, European colonists began noting changes in New England's ecology and landscape. Their recorded impressions largely consisted of observations in the form of letters, diaries, pamphlets, and reports of discoveries. Less common are plant specimens and paintings or drawings of plants that document the region's flora. This program will consider the botanical diversity of western Massachusetts as revealed in herbaria - collections of plant specimens.
In the 19th century, the practice of gathering and preserving specimens became widespread among amateur botanists interested in studying nature, in cataloguing the natural riches of the country, and in the medicinal and culinary uses of plants. Enthusiastic American "botanizers" included well-known figures such as Meriwether Lewis and Emily Dickinson, and numerous others relegated to obscurity. The herbarium of Deerfield physician Stephen West Williams (1790-1855) demonstrates the diversity and distribution of plants in the second decade of the 19th century, and provides a baseline for the presence of invasive species and endangered or extinct flora.
This one-day forum brings together a range of speakers for a lively discussion of the history, use, and preservation of herbaria in western Massachusetts. At the end of the program participants will have the opportunity to examine restored pages of Stephen West Williams’s herbarium.
For a complete schedule of the day's events, visit: www.historic-deerfield.org. Click on the link below to register online.