Garden and Forest
Garden and Forest: A Journal of Horticulture, Landscape Art, and Forestry was the first American journal devoted to horticulture, botany, landscape design and preservation, national and urban park development, scientific forestry, and the conservation of forest resources. The journal was established by Charles Sprague Sargent (1841-1927), the founding director of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. Though the journal was published independently, Sargent considered the weekly magazine the organ of the Arboretum.
The full ten-volume run of Garden and Forest
contains approximately 8,400 pages, including over 1,000
illustrations and 2,000 pages of advertisements. Each
seven-to-eleven-page issue contains articles that are both
literary, as well as scholarly and scientific, and of
interest to readers ranging from curious amateurs to
practicing professionals. It provides practical information
on specific plants as well as horticultural practices,
guidance on the design of gardens, the growth of trees, and
the care and management of public and private grounds. Each
issue usually includes department devoted to: Editorial
Articles, New or Little Known Plants, Entomological,
Pomology, Foreign Correspondence, Correspondence, Cultural
Notes, Plant Notes, The Forest, and Recent Publications or
Periodic Literature. Some issues also include listings of
Exhibitions and Expositions, and summaries of Retail Flower
Market Prices. Many of the articles are illustrated. The
art work includes line drawings, halftones, diagrams,
plans, botanical illustrations, portraits, and landscapes.
Every issue also contains at least four pages of
advertisements that provide a valuable snapshot of
contemporary commercial products, services, and
establishments. Each volume has an annual index and list of
illustrations.
Garden and Forest is the first project of the Preservation Digital Reformatting Program in the Library of Congress's Preservation Reformatting Division. It is the first Library of Congress digitizing project to employ Making of America models.
Making of America
Making of America (MOA) is a digital library comprising reproductions of primary source materials in American social history published in the late-nineteenth century. The original collaborative effort between the University of Michigan and Cornell University to create MOA was funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. From the beginning, MOA goals have included not only creating digital reproductions of historical source materials, but also developing models for community practice to enable a large-scale, integrated, and distributed digital library involving multiple institutions. Subsequent phases of Making of America have been sponsored by the Digital Library Federation and have included collaborations among the University of California at Berkeley, Cornell University, Stanford University, Pennsylvania State University, University of Michigan, Harvard University, and the New York Public Library.
The Library of Congress has participated in Digital Library Federation activities pertaining to technical architecture and metadata. Garden and Forest is the first Library of Congress project to incorporate Making of America models into the digitizing of source materials in order to optimize the potential for interoperability with like digital collections created at other institutions.
Collaboration
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Garden and Forest
The second Garden and Forest collaboration is between the Library of Congress's Preservation Reformatting Division and the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. The founding director of the Arnold Arboretum, Charles Sprague Sargent (1841-1927), established the journal and shaped its mission. The Arnold Arboretum was considering digitizing Garden and Forest when it learned the Library of Congress's project was already underway. The two institutions then joined forces to provide enhanced access to the digital reproduction. Toward that end, the Arnold Arboretum is contributing essays that illuminate the historical background of the journal (available with the Phase 1 release, December 1999) and the four major fields it addresses: botany, horticulture, landscape design and preservation, and forestry. In addition, it is developing an electronic finding aid, based on the volume-level indices in each original print volume, that will enable users to search and browse controlled subject terms, as well as author, title, and illustration-caption information.
Several institutions assisted with Interlibrary Loan requests to provide replacement pages needed to make the ten volumes of Garden and Forest complete. The California Academy of Sciences Library, and Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University made special and extended contributions to this effort. In addition, the California Academy of Sciences Library helped to solve the mystery of the original publication format of Garden and Forest by surveying a large number of issues in their collection that remain in their original state. More information on this part of the project can be found in Digitizing and Delivery.