The Star Malaysia - Star2

America’s great food explorer

Mango, kale, avocado and more in the US can all be traced to one man, David Fairchild.

- By DANIEL NEMAN

THE history of food in the United States can be divided into two periods: before David Fairchild and after David Fairchild.

Fairchild, who lived from 1869 to 1954, was a botanist and adventurer who travelled around the world at a time when few people ever left the country. He went to other countries, sometimes braving dangerous conditions to do so, to send back seeds and cuttings of plants, unknown on this continent, that he thought might be able to grow here and help the agricultur­e industry.

Before Fairchild set out on his mission, American agricultur­e was in a rut, according to Daniel Stone, author of The Food Explorer: The True Adventures of the GlobeTrott­ing Botanist Who Transforme­d What America Eats. People ate meat, particular­ly pork, cheese and bread. Fruits and vegetables were rare, and often viewed with suspicion.

Then came Fairchild, who visited more than 50 countries by boat and sent back thousands of seeds and cuttings. Some could not be grown efficientl­y in American soil, some never found a wide American audience. But an impressive number of others hit their mark.

“You can see his legacy when you walk into a supermarke­t and you see mangos that are native to the Philippine­s, when you sleep on sheets that are made of Egyptian cotton that he brought to this country, when you eat types of citrus, oranges and lemons, that are native to China, when you drink American beer, because of the hops that he brought at the end of the 19th century,” Stone said from his home in Washington, DC.

It’s not just mangos, Egyptian cotton, some varieties of citrus and hops that were better for beer than the types already being grown here. Fairchild also introduced avocados to these shores. And dates. And pistachios. And cashews (they were popular but could not be grown here). And soybeans. And red seedless grapes. And kale. And citron.

The story of how Fairchild came to get the citron cuttings is one of the most dramatic in a book full of dramatic stories. He was just 25 and alone in Corsica, with no official papers and only slight knowledge of French. He was arrested on suspicion of being a spy of some sort – which is kind of what he

was. A culinary and agricultur­al

“He was an economist, he was a spy. botanist, he was a traveller, an adventurer, he was a diplomat. He really combined all those skills to have a transforma­tive effect on the country,” Fairchild Stone had said. both the people skills and the knowledge to do the job that he essentiall­y invented. He had to know which plants might be beneficial to Americans, which could possibly be grown here and which might find a receptive audi ence. He had to know the weaknesses of plants grown in the United States so he could recognise the potential of a different variety

grown elsewhere. He had to know how to cajole farmers, most of whom had never seen an American before, into allowing him to take a cutting or send back some seeds.

And he had to have the courage to go into dangerous lands (there was a reason Fiji was called the Cannibal Islands, though the tradition of eating human flesh was dying out by the time Fairchild brought them their first encounter with ice) and to risk disease. He came down with a case of typhoid fever in what was then called Ceylon – just after leaving a boat on which a child had died of cholera – and his mentor, sponsor and frequent travelling companion Barbour Lathrop suffered a near-fatal case of yellow fever.

Lathrop, who insistentl­y wends his way throughout the book, is almost as interestin­g a character as Fairchild. Born into a real estate fortune, he spent most of his days restlessly travelling around the world, telling and embellishi­ng stories of his adventures to anyone who would listen and some who would not.

Lathrop provided the money and companions­hip for Fairchild’s initial voyages and was easily the most important person in his life until Fairchild met and married his wife – who was, almost inevitably for a life this well-lived, the daughter of Alexander Graham Bell.

Once he was married and had children, Fairchild stopped his incessant travelling. Still, Stone said, “he had even more impact in the second half of his life”, because he recruited a few young men to continue his work, and they sent back even more seeds and cuttings that proved beneficial to American farmers and cooks.

One of these men made his biggest splash with a lemon he was originally told was just ornamental. The man, who had briefly worked at the Missouri Botanical Garden early in his career, tasted it and was amazed by the flavour. It was sweeter than a lemon and more tart than an orange.

The man’s name was Frank Meyer. — St Louis Post-Dispatch/ Tribune News Service

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 ?? — Photos: Handout ?? Cashew Anacardium Occi Dentale, 1909, one of the watercolor­s showing fruit that was introduced to America by David Fairchild commission­ed by the US Department of Agricultur­e bet ween 1899 and 1919.
— Photos: Handout Cashew Anacardium Occi Dentale, 1909, one of the watercolor­s showing fruit that was introduced to America by David Fairchild commission­ed by the US Department of Agricultur­e bet ween 1899 and 1919.
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 ??  ?? Mangosteen Garcinia Mangostana, 1909.
Mangosteen Garcinia Mangostana, 1909.
 ??  ?? Fairchild (left) relaxes at his Florida home with his father-in-law, Alexander Graham Bell.
Fairchild (left) relaxes at his Florida home with his father-in-law, Alexander Graham Bell.
 ??  ?? Watermelon Citrullus Lanatus, 1916.
Watermelon Citrullus Lanatus, 1916.
 ??  ?? Papaya Carica Papaya, 1912.
Papaya Carica Papaya, 1912.
 ??  ?? Red Grape Sultanina Rosea, 1901.
Red Grape Sultanina Rosea, 1901.
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 ??  ?? Fairchild (right) talks with his longtime friend, benefactor and travelling companion, Barbour Lathrop.
Fairchild (right) talks with his longtime friend, benefactor and travelling companion, Barbour Lathrop.
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 ??  ?? Peters No. 1 Mango Manglifera Indica, 1907.
Peters No. 1 Mango Manglifera Indica, 1907.
 ??  ?? Corsican Limon, 1899.
Corsican Limon, 1899.

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