ELWYN B. ROBINSON DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
CHESTER FRITZ LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA
GRAND FORKS, NORTH DAKOTA 58202

FANNIE MAHOOD HEATH PAPERS

COLLECTION: OGL#101

DATES: 1921-1955

SIZE: .4 linear feet

INTRODUCTION

ACQUISITION: The Fannie Mahood Papers were deposited in the Orin G. Libby Manuscript Collection by Mrs. Pearl Heath Frazier in 1955. The acquisition records are unavailable.

ACCESS: Available for inspection under the rules and regulations of the Department of Special Collections.

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

Fannie Mahood Heath was born on March 5, 1864 in Wykoff, Minnesota. She was taught gardening at a young age by both her parents and grandparents. Her father, John Mahood, had learned the medicinal value of plants from Native Americans during the California gold rush of 1850. Her grandmother had also given her a small garden plot at the young age of seven. The family moved to Grand Forks, Dakota Territory, in 1880. She married Frank Heath of Grand Forks on June 16, 1881. The couple homesteaded in on a farm in Brenna Township, west of the city.

Upon arriving, she decided that the farm needed protection from the wind. She first planted lilac bushes and fir saplings. The firs quickly died, but the lilac trees survived. After speaking with a florist, she learned that their farmstead was on a heavy alkaline area. He advised them to abandon the homestead and find another. The Heaths, however, had different plans. They decided to discover what plants grew well on their farm. They also tried different techniques to neutralize the soil. The most radical method used was to pour vinegar on the ground. The vinegar would react with the alkaline in the soil and bubble. She knew the soil was neutral when it stopped bubbling. She discovered later that she was the first person to use this process.

She continued to plant lilac bushes, cottonwood, box elder and willow trees to form a shelterbelt around the farmyard. She raised a son, Frank, and a daughter, Pearl. After Frank died in 1902, she told her husband that she wanted to leave North Dakota. Her husband replied that they had spent too much of their life on the homestead to leave. To cope with her sorrow, Fannie began to correspond with different people. She sent surveys of bird migrations to the Biological Survey in Washington, DC. She wrote O. A. Stevens at the North Dakota Agricultural College about the Latin nomenclature of plants, and also came to know C. B. Warden at that same institution. They both agreed that it was necessary for farmsteads to create gardens for food and beautification and shelterbelts for protection from the fierce North Dakota winds. In 1923 C. B. Warden published Perennial Flowers in North Dakota with Fannie as co-author. In 1922 Hamilton Traub asked her help in establishing a National Horticulture Society. She became vice president when the society was established in July of 1922. Besides simply corresponding with people, she also exchanged seeds with them. She collected seeds from all across America, Norway, England, and China. During her seed exchanges, she formed a special relationship with T. Hay, the superintendent of the Kew Gardens in London, England. He found it interesting that Americans would come to England to find the newest roses, delphiniums and other European flowers without even thinking that there may be more beautiful flowers in America.

One American saw the beds of flowers that T. Hay planted with Fannie's seeds and decided to purchase large quantities of the seeds without even knowing that they were American wildflowers. Fannie decided to do something about this lack of appreciation for American wildflowers. She wrote articles for Park's Floral, Nature, National Geographic and Botanist magazines on the value and beauty of growing native plants. She was asked to join the Great Plains Horticulture Society in 1925. Also, in that same year, she decided that she could no longer host the hundred-plus people who would visit the farm on weekends. In 1925, it was estimated that there were over 450 varieties of shrubs and flowers on four acres of land on the Heath farm.

She was asked to design the landscape for the Theodore Roosevelt cabin that was, at that time, on the capitol grounds in Bismarck, North Dakota. She planted 45 native shrubs, nine native trees and 150 varieties of native flowers there. She considered this one of the high points of her life. She died on September 29, 1931 at the age of 67. There was an exhibit in memory of Fannie Mahood Heath at the 1933 "Century of Progress" Exposition in Chicago. The exhibit included photographs of Fannie, her garden, and the Roosevelt Cabin. It proclaimed her as the "Flower Woman of North Dakota."

SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE

The Fannie Mahood Heath Papers consist of a biography and genealogy of Fannie Mahood Heath, in addition to her writings, correspondence, and drawings regarding native plants. Also included are newspaper clippings about the Heath family homestead and Perennial Flowers for North Dakota Homes by A. F. Yeager and Fannie Mahood Heath. The collection also contains photographs of Fannie's gardens taken by her daughter Pearl Heath Frazier. The entire collection was compiled by Fannie's daughter Pearl Heath Frazier.

BOX AND FOLDER INVENTORY

Box 1
Folder

  1. Biography, genealogy, writings, and correspondence relating to Mrs. Heath's part in the National Horticultural Society compiled by Pearl Heath Frazier
  2. Numerous photos of plant life grown on Mrs. Heath's Grand Forks farm, letters from English Botanical gardeners and other plant life enthusiasts
  3. "Gardening in North Dakota" by F. M. Heath, compiled by Pearl Heath Frazier from magazine articles, manuscripts and letters written by Fannie Mahood Heath
  4. Perennial Flowers for North Dakota Homes by A. F. Yeager and Fannie Mahood Heath

 Original Donation  First Addition: 2000

Return to: Pioneer Life
Return to: Women's Papers

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