Begun as a response to a request to develop a historically accurate museum garden representing home gardens before and after Oklahoma's statehood in 1907, research reported in this article describes both native and non-native plants cultivated in gardens in Northeast Oklahoma, Southwest Missouri, Southeast Kansas, and Northwest Arkansas between 1841 and 1930. Much of the evidence of the diversity of plants grown in home gardens by Native Americans who were moved here and homesteaders who settled here is found in historic records that have only recently been digitized for global accessibility
The author grew up in the prairie region of Kay County where he learned to appreciate proper managem...
In 1997, the Oklahoma Biological Survey and the Oklahoma Native Plant Society undertook an unusual j...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
Spring has officially begun, and some area residents are beginning to plant gardens, flowers, and ot...
By all accounts, the peoples of the Northwest Coast of North America did not cultivate plants at the...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
As members of the Oklahoma Native Plant Society (ONPS) well know, Oklahoma has a tremendous diversit...
This article will investigate the role of the botanical garden in botany. What its role is and how i...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
A decline in Northwest Arkansas\u27s native plant population has occurred over the past 50 years, as...
Article describes the early days of historic preservation in Oklahoma, chronicling the time before t...
In 1921 the writer spent a short time in a study of some of the interesting plants found near Muskog...
This paper presents the results of taxonomic and ecological studies of the plants of Kiowa County, O...
This article reports the results of an inventory of the vascular plants from the Nowata County porti...
This project examined the historical development and the horticultural practices in the public garde...
The author grew up in the prairie region of Kay County where he learned to appreciate proper managem...
In 1997, the Oklahoma Biological Survey and the Oklahoma Native Plant Society undertook an unusual j...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
Spring has officially begun, and some area residents are beginning to plant gardens, flowers, and ot...
By all accounts, the peoples of the Northwest Coast of North America did not cultivate plants at the...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
As members of the Oklahoma Native Plant Society (ONPS) well know, Oklahoma has a tremendous diversit...
This article will investigate the role of the botanical garden in botany. What its role is and how i...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
A decline in Northwest Arkansas\u27s native plant population has occurred over the past 50 years, as...
Article describes the early days of historic preservation in Oklahoma, chronicling the time before t...
In 1921 the writer spent a short time in a study of some of the interesting plants found near Muskog...
This paper presents the results of taxonomic and ecological studies of the plants of Kiowa County, O...
This article reports the results of an inventory of the vascular plants from the Nowata County porti...
This project examined the historical development and the horticultural practices in the public garde...
The author grew up in the prairie region of Kay County where he learned to appreciate proper managem...
In 1997, the Oklahoma Biological Survey and the Oklahoma Native Plant Society undertook an unusual j...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...