Nora Pöyhönen
Alexanda Eleonora Pöyhönen | |
---|---|
Born |
Alexandra Eleonora Europaeus 16 July 1849 Liperi, Grand Duchy of Finland |
Died |
1 April 1938 88) Haapavesi, Finland | (aged
Spouse(s) | 1875→ Juho (Johan) Pöyhönen (1839–1906) |
Children |
|
Parent(s) |
Anders Josef Europaeus and Selma Augusta née Lampa |
Awards |
|
Alexandra Eleonora "Nora" Pöyhönen (née Europaeus; 16 July 1849 — 1 April 1938) was a Finnish horticulturist and school director.
Since her early years Pöyhönen was interested in agriculture, and later as provost's wife, she could focus on horticulture. She soon gained attention due to her excellent gardening skills.
Pöyhönen wanted to develop level of education and awareness of horticultural potential. After moving to Haapavesi, she started a horticultural and cooking school, which taught both cultivation and utilisation of harvest. The school still operates today.
Pöyhönen had seven children, of whom six survived until adult age.
Early life
Pöyhönen's parents were Liperi vicar Anders Josef Europaeus and Selma Augusta née Lampa. Since young age she was interested in agriculture. She wanted to become primary school teacher, but had to abandon her studies due to health reasons.[1]
In 1875 she married priest Juho Pöyhönen. When he was appointed chaplain of Pielisjärvi, Nora Pöyhönen took independently care of the vicarage plantations, which eventually flourished so well that it caught attention of the Finnish Senate Agricultural Committee.[1]
Horticultural and cooking school
The family moved to Haapavesi in 1886. Nora Pöyhönen started to teach horticulture to the local children, but soon she realised, that there was now knowledge at their homes how to prepare food from the harvest. The 1860s devastating famine was fresh in people's memory, and Pöyhönen, following the spirit of the era, wanted to develop food production. She developed an idea about horticultural and cooking school, which was started in the vicarage. In 1903 she took a loan and ordered plans for a school from architect Wivi Lönn. The plans included the school building, furniture and gazebos. The school became soon renowned due to its park, including roses and versatile ornamental plantings. Pöyhönen made successful experiments for example in cranberry cultivation, but maintained also old local varieties of plants.[1]
Pöyhönen's school was the first one of its kind in Northern Europe, possibly in the whole world, and the northern location made it especially significant. The school improved especially women's standard of education in the Northern Ostrobothnian region.[1]
Pöyhönen wrote a gardening textbook with her daughter Maiju. The 1927 issued Kodin kasvitarha was the main gardening textbook in number of Finnish agricultural schools for decades.[1]
After Juho Pöyhönen's death in 1906, the deeply religious widow joined to Pentecostalism and had close contact with the local and some international leaders of the movement.[1]
Personal life
Nora and Juho Pöyhönen got seven children; six of them survived until adult age.[1]
Pöyhönen was independent and punctilious by nature, and she had a strong aesthetic vision. She demanded quality and beauty. Writer Pentti Haanpää characterised her: "Nothing else was good to her, than perfectly good".[1]
Legacy
After Nora Pöyhönen's death in 1938 and her descendants led and developed her school until 1990. Its study programme soon covered courses for home economics advisors, gardening teachers and apiarists. The school became state-owned in 1955 and it still exists as vocational school.[1]
Sources
External links
- Media related to Nora Pöyhönen at Wikimedia Commons