Isabella Preston

Isabella Preston is hailed as the "Queen of Ornamental Horticulture."[1] She is widely known and respected for her extensive work in ornamental plant breeding. During her 26-year career, she produced nearly 200 new hardy hybrids of lily, lilac, crab apple, iris and roses for Canada’s cold climate. While female plant breeders were rather rare in her day, she quietly challenged gender bias and set the stage for new generations of breeding programs at the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and elsewhere.[1]

Biography

Isabella Preston was born on 4 September 1881 in Lancaster, England.[1] She helped her father on the family farm and attended a ladies horticultural college.[1] In 1912 she moved to Canada, picked fruit near Guelph, Ontario for several years, and enrolled in the Ontario Agricultural College (now University of Guelph) where she studied plant breeding.[1] Between 1912 and 1920 Preston was involved in breeding various vegetables, fruits and flowering plants including garden lilies.[2] She gained international recognition by introducing the acclaimed “George C. Creelman” lily and became the first professional woman hybridist in Canada in 1916.[2] She died on 31 December 1965 in Georgetown, Ontario.[3]

Career

In 1920, (at age 40) she relocated to Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and worked as a day labourer for the federal government at the Central Experimental Farm (CEF). Her work was noticed by W.T. Macoun, Dominion Horticulturalist, and she was soon offered the position of Specialist in Ornamental Horticulture. She was the first person to focus solely on breeding ornamental plants.[1] She worked with lilies, lilac, crab apple trees, peonies and roses. She developed many of the 125 different strains in the Central Experimental Farm lilac collection. Her lilac and crab apple hybrids are also still seen flowering on the Central Experimental Farm each spring along with two of her roses.

Her achievements include:

Isabella Preston wrote numerous articles on various horticultural subjects, and in 1929 published Garden Lilies, the first book about lily cultivation in Canada.[2] Upon her death in 1965, 139 of her gardening and plant books were donated to the Royal Botanical Gardens Library in Hamilton, Ontario.[2]

Honours and awards

A new hybrid species of lilacs was named in her honour “Syringa prestoniae” [1] This was the result of a cross between wild species from China and put Canada on the lilac “map”.[5] In 2005 the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa created the “Preston Heritage Collection”.[4] In February 2007, Canada Post released two new stamps featuring a lilac variety developed by Ms. Preston. She was co-organizer of the North American Lily Society. The Isabella Preston Trophy was established by the North American Lily Society in recognition of her work.[2] She received awards from many Canadian and international horticultural societies including lifetime memberships from the Massachusetts Horticultural Society and the Canadian Iris Society.[2] Notable awards include the Veitch Memorial Medal in Gold (Royal Horticultural Society, London, 1938), Jackson Dawson Medal (Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 1946), Lytell Cup (Lily Committee, Royal Horticultural Society, 1950), and the EH Wilson Memorial Award (North American Lily Society, 1961).[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 T.H. Anstey, Agriculture Canada One Hundred Harvests, Research Branch, Agriculture Canada, 1886-1986. Research Branch, Agriculture Canada, Horticulture Series No. 27, 1986. p. 252-256
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "science.ca : Isabella Preston".
  3. "Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), 6 Jan 1966, p. 3".
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Lilacs at the Gardens & Arboretum".
  5. 1 2 "Lilacs at the Gardens & Arboretum".
  6. http://www.friendsofthefarm.ca/rosepreston.htm
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