Alice Lounsberry Explained

Alice Lounsberry (6 November 1868  - 21 November 1949, both in New York City) was an American botanist and author active in the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Some sources give her birth year as 1872. She worked closely with the Australian botanical artist Ellis Rowan, publishing three books with her as illustrator.

Early life

Lounsberry was the daughter of James Smith Lounsberry and Sarah Woodruff (Burrows) Lounsberry. She was educated at Mrs. Sylvanus Reed's School in New York City (Leonard, 1914). Lounsberry's love for flowers and plants began as a young girl, likely from exploring the gardens around New York City where she lived. By the time she was in her twenties, she was on the board for the New York Botanical Garden.

Career

Lounsberry is well known for her work alongside famed Australian botanical illustrator Ellis Rowan, known as “The Flower Hunter”, and the majority of her popular published works came from her time working with Rowan. The two first corresponded while Rowan was hospitalized after she contracted influenza during a trip to New York. This news was heard around the city and Lounsberry, a huge admirer of Rowan, brought a handpicked box of wildflowers to the hospital, alongside a card reading “From one flower seeker to another - and an admirer of your work”. Rowan was touched by the gesture, and the two became friends, despite their twenty year age difference.

In the next four years, the two traveled over the Southeastern United States in search of native plants. The first year, they traveled to Florida, exploring the St. Johns River, among other sites. They then visited the Southern Appalachian region, including Roan Mountain, Tennessee and Grandfather Mountain, North Carolina. The next year they returned to that region, working at the herbarium of the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina. Presumably this is where Lounsberry became acquainted with Chauncey Beadle. The two women made a great team: “Lounsberry provided detailed botanical structure along with engaging observations of her subjects and their natural history, while Rowan’s artwork found a new audience. Together, their books were very popular". According to Samuel (1961), it was while in Asheville that Rowan received news that her son Eric (called "Puck") had been killed in South Africa. This would have taken place in the period 1899–1900, presumably during the Second Boer War (1899-1902).

Regarding her travels with Rowan in the American South, Lounsberry wrote: "To learn something of the history, the folklore and the uses of southern plants and to see rare ones growing in their natural surroundings, Mrs. Rowan and I traveled in many parts of the south, exercising always our best blandishments to get the people of the section to talk with us. Through the mountainous region we drove from cabin to cabin, and nowhere could we have met with greater kindness and hospitality."[1] Lounsberry and Rowan published three books together: A Guide to the Wild Flowers (1899), A Guide to the Trees (1900), and Southern Wild Flowers & Trees (1901).[1] Their three works together were unique in the world of botanical writing: the books were formatted as a biological field guide, organized by the habitat in which the plant species lived. Lounsberry wrote several more works on botany and gardening, but none reached the popularity of her works with Rowan, based on their abundance on the used book market, circa 2006.

Published works

Published works by Alice Lounsberry include:

References

Notes

Notes and References

  1. The Daily Gardener