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Courtney Fullilove. The Profit of the Earth: The Global Seeds of American Agriculture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017. 280 pp. ISBN 978-0-226-45486-3 (cloth); 978-0-226-45505-1 (e-book).

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Courtney Fullilove. The Profit of the Earth: The Global Seeds of American Agriculture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017. 280 pp. ISBN 978-0-226-45486-3 (cloth); 978-0-226-45505-1 (e-book).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2020

Camden Burd*
Affiliation:
Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Humanities Institute New York Botanical Garden
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Abstract

Type
Review
Copyright
© The Author 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

In Courtney Fullilove’s The Profit of the Earth: The Global Seeds of American Agriculture, the author selects several histories of American agriculture that directly contest the individualized and nation-based stories that too often dominate popular understandings of history. Divided into three sections based on stories of collection, circulation, and preservation, Fullilove uses an impressive range of examples to convincingly illustrate the global entanglements and varied forms of contested knowledge that are too often ignored or diluted in the current telling of the nation’s agricultural history.

The first section, “Collection,” tracks the emergence of American agricultural knowledge through the history of national organizations such as the United States Patent Office and the Smithsonian Institution. From the outset, Fullilove argues, the federal government has aimed to promote agricultural knowledge through the collection and dissemination of seeds and information. The author’s examination of Henry Ellsworth, the first commissioner of patents, epitomizes this point. Serving in the role from 1835 to 1845, Ellsworth hoped to gather seeds and information in order to promote more efficient and profitable forms of agriculture across the continent. Fullilove correctly notes that the process of collection was often problematic, readily erasing local knowledge and practices associated with plant material. Rather, Ellsworth’s collectors focused their attention on a plant’s geography and its potential in the American market. In doing so, Fullilove argues, scientists and agriculturists erased the histories of hybridization and local cultural significance that had defined those plants for millennia. Ellsworth’s policy of free seed distribution, often to the chagrin of seed dealers and nurserymen, further illustrates his primary motivation for collecting seeds: to encourage westward expansion and increase market activity.

The Profit of the Earth readily confronts the many myths of American agriculture, including the hagiographic place of the Turkey Red Wheat—an object of considerable focus in the second section, “Migration.” Too often portrayed as “the seed that made the United States a breadbasket of the world,” the story of the Turkey Red Wheat is actually one of displacement, communal social organization, and trade networks (123). As the author points out, the success of certain Mennonite communities in the Great Plains was hardly the story of American exceptionalism. Rather, the Mennonites’ commercial and environmental achievements resulted from above-average financial means as immigrants and communal sharing of resources to endure various environmental and economic episodes, as well as trans-Atlantic networks of trade used to gather seeds from the Russian steppes that would support their venture. Working to push against individualistic and nation-based histories, Fullilove demonstrates that this “success story” of American agriculture requires knowledge of the history of the Russian steppes and Mennonite social systems, as well as their the communal—not singular—approach to the nineteenth-century marketplace.

The third section, “Preservation,” offers histories of those who sought to retain indigenous plants and knowledge in the wake of environmental change. Though the triumph of the Mennonites’ land use enabled further settlement and development in the American West, the new land practices supplanted other plant species and forms of environmental knowledge. One example centers on the efforts of an Ohio-based pharmacist, John Uri Lloyd, as he navigated the shifting landscape of commercialized medicine and territorial expansion. Seeking out the native Echinacea for medicinal purposes, Lloyd relied on specialized, though low-paid, collectors to gather large amounts of the plant. The pharmacist’s venture proved to be increasingly difficult as farmers considered the plant a noxious weed that acted only as an obstacle in their grain-centric vision of the American West. Fullilove’s inclusion of Lloyd’s story demonstrates how market-oriented agriculture of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries reorganized the perceived importance of certain flora and plant knowledge in society.

Though the book sprawls across geography, plant specimens, and themes, Fullilove’s writing always manages to bring the reader back to the three core concepts of the text. The addition of “Field Notes”—narrative interludes that recount Fullilove’s personal travels and experiences—further frame the direction and layout of the book. As a result, The Profit of the Earth reads like a series of historical vignettes that successfully reframe nineteenth-century American agricultural history as a product of global forces and diverse groups who all sought to navigate the trans-Atlantic trade, American empire, and increased influence of a capitalist economy.