Remembering Bryce Farnsworth
Bryce Farnsworth of
Fargo, North Dakota passed away during the evening on Thursday, September 13, 2018 after a sudden and unexpected heart attack.
My husband Rich and I attended Bryce’s funeral on September 20 in McHenry, North Dakota. We were joined by Karen Schock, past President and founder of the Central North Dakota Daylily Society; Susan Holland, AHS Region One Daylily Pioneer newsletter Editor; Joan Zettel, liaison for North Dakota State University’s historic and contemporary AHS Daylily Display Gardens in Fargo; Barbara Laschkewitsch, NDSU Plant Sciences Liaison; Dr. Chiwon W. Lee, Professor, NDSU Plant Sciences; and others from NDSU.
My husband Rich and I attended Bryce’s funeral on September 20 in McHenry, North Dakota. We were joined by Karen Schock, past President and founder of the Central North Dakota Daylily Society; Susan Holland, AHS Region One Daylily Pioneer newsletter Editor; Joan Zettel, liaison for North Dakota State University’s historic and contemporary AHS Daylily Display Gardens in Fargo; Barbara Laschkewitsch, NDSU Plant Sciences Liaison; Dr. Chiwon W. Lee, Professor, NDSU Plant Sciences; and others from NDSU.
Bryce Farnsworth--image courtesy of Debbie Monbeck
Bryce Farnsworth served Region One of
the American Daylily Society in many capacities. He became AHS Region One
Historian in 2002 and became an AHS Garden Judge in 2005 and continued in these
positions until his death. He faithfully attended annual regional meetings
until 2018, when hospitalization with pneumonia forced him to cancel. He
donated many daylilies to several regional meeting auctions, regional Internet
auctions, and regional mail auctions over the years. Bryce also donated
daylilies to new daylily clubs within Region One to get them started, and he
donated daylilies to several club bargain sale tables.
Bryce’s personal garden was an AHS
Display Garden. Bryce hybridized daylilies. He was a mentor to newbies, and
welcomed them to the daylily world
Most significantly, Bryce was a daylily advocate. He was passionate about North Dakota State University's historic daylily, iris, and other plant collections in Fargo. He contacted me to save NDSU’s historic and modern daylily collection, iris collection, AAS and other display gardens from demolition (the entire area was to become a parking lot for the new College of Business Administration building).
Bryce and I teamed up with
NDSU's Barb Laschkewisch; Karen Schock; and the late Janice Dehod,
President of the new Canadian Prairie Daylily Society in Winnipeg, Manitoba,
Canada. We all met in Fargo with NDSU President Dr. Joseph Chapman and Vice
President and College of Agriculture Dean Pat Jensen to explain the value of
the AHS Display Garden’s historical collection with its rare cultivars and
attempt to save these collections and keep them accessible. Our efforts were
successful. We made such a good impression that Dr. Chapman canceled the rest
of his meetings for that day and led us on an impromptu campus tour. More
meetings of a happier nature followed. Dr. Chapman created
a brand-new alternate campus entrance with much larger space where all the
gardens were relocated.
Karen Schock; Bryce Farnsworth; NDSU President Dr. Joseph A. Chapman; Mary Baker, NDSU Vice President Patricia A. Jensen, J.D.; Janice Dehod; NDSU Plant Sciences Research Specialist Barbara Laschkewitsch; and NDSU officials (summer 2002)
NDSU’s historic
daylily collection became the very first public AHS Historic Daylily Display
Garden. Bryce served as the liaison for NDSU's Historic Daylily Display Garden
and modern Daylily Display Garden from 2004 until his death. Bryce loved to
collect daylilies and donated many historic and modern daylilies to NDSU.
Bryce Farnsworth--image courtesy of Joan Zettel
The Display Gardens at NDSU
Rich and I visited NDSU’s public
gardens on Friday morning, September 21, before we returned to Omaha. It felt
like Bryce was there, walking the gardens with us. The first thing we saw was the
NDSU Agricultural Experiment Station sign below. Beyond this sign are the All-America
Selections Display Garden beds. The AAS Display Garden beds were full of ornamental annuals providing a a palette of lush, gorgeous flowers in a beautiful setting.
NDSU's gardens are located at 1200 18th Street North in Fargo
Next we walked through a
display area featuring a variety of hardy perennials. Many were in bloom, while
others such as Baptisia displayed lovely foliage.
Beyond the perennials area is
a large iris bed and then daylilies—lots and lots of daylilies. The daylily
garden consists of two large areas—the AHS Daylily Display Garden containing
modern daylily cultivars, and the AHS Historic Daylily Display Garden featuring
historic daylily cultivars and daylily species. The entrance to the AHS
Historic Daylily Garden is marked with the following sign.
Not a weed was to be
seen anywhere. Our visit took place during very late bloom season. Only a couple of
the species daylilies and almost none of the modern daylilies were in bloom. We
were surprised to see several historic daylily cultivars in bloom. One cultivar
caught our eyes from several beds away, a tall, well-branched cadmium yellow.
We got a closer look and the cultivar was none other than Arlow Stout’s diploid AUTUMN
KING (1950). Scapes are registered at 54 inches tall with 3 inch blooms. The
large specimen clump is in an unprotected bed and scapes are quite erect (with
no leaning). Scapes are well-branched with many nicely spaced buds.
AUTUMN KING (Stout, 1950) blooming on September 21 at NDSU
AUTUMN KING (Stout, 1950) blooming on September 21 at NDSU
Closeup of AUTUMN KING (Stout, 1950) blooming on September 21 at NDSU
Bryce was proud of his
Norwegian heritage, and one of his favorite historic diploid cultivars, NORWEGIAN LASS
(David F. Hall, 1955) grows at NDSU. It was not in bloom at NDSU this late in
the season. Bryce gave me NORWEGIAN LASS, and it will always have a place in my
Omaha, Nebraska garden.
NORWEGIAN LASS (Hall-D.F., 1955) blooming in Omaha
Clump of NORWEGIAN LASS (Hall-D.F., 1955) blooming in Omaha
The Lenington All-American Award Winners Bed
NDSU applied for and received a
grant from AHS to establish a Lenington All-American award winners bed. Bryce and
I worked with Oliver Billingslea, AHS Region 14 Director and Chair of Special
Projects. Oliver convinced AHS that North Dakota State University was a good
place to establish this bed (NDSU had all but 17 of the award-winners). The AHS
grant helped NDSU complete the Lenington All-American collection. AHS members
from Region One as well as from other regions generously donated many of the
missing cultivars. NDSU created a new bed in a prominent location to house all
the award winners. Part of the grant paid for a bronze sign labeling the
Lenington All-American Bed, which thanks AHS for funding the bed.
Lenington All-American Award Winners Bed sign
During our visit, we saw that
eight of the Lenington All-American award winners were lost over
winter. AHS members from Region One and other regions, please consider donating
these cultivars to NDSU next spring.
If you can contribute one or more of the following Lenington All-American award winners, please contact Joan Zettel, liaison for NDSU’s daylily display gardens. Joan’s email address is momzettel@hotmail.com. Here are the eight Lenington All-American award winning cultivars NDSU needs:
If you can contribute one or more of the following Lenington All-American award winners, please contact Joan Zettel, liaison for NDSU’s daylily display gardens. Joan’s email address is momzettel@hotmail.com. Here are the eight Lenington All-American award winning cultivars NDSU needs:
JASON SALTER (Salter-E.H., 1987)
KING KAHUNA (Crochet, 1994)
OLIVE BAILEY LANGDON (Munson-R.W., 1974)
RUSSIAN RHAPSODY (Munson-R.W., 1973)
YESTERDAY MEMORIES (Spalding-W., 1976)
GOD SAVE THE QUEEN (Morss, 2005)
MARGO REED INDEED (Murphy, J.P., 2004)
Bryce Farnsworth’s Legacy
Bryce Farnsworth’s work at NDSU was widely
recognized. On Friday, October 24, 2003, Bryce received the prestigious Prairie
Garden Award for Excellence for 2003. Presented by the Prairie Garden
Committee, this award is for excellence in horticulture. Bryce was the fourth
person to receive the Prairie Garden Award for Excellence and he is the first
non-Canadian award recipient. Bryce received this award during a ceremony at
Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Click HERE for more information.
Bryce Farnsworth (right) receives the 2003 Prairie Garden Award for Excellence
from Gary Platford, Co-chair of The Prairie Garden Committee (left)
Bryce received the AHS Region One Service Award in 2009.
Bryce was a close friend,
intelligent, with a heart of gold and a wonderful sense of humor. I was honored
to name one of my best daylily registrations for Bryce in 2013. How I will miss
him!
BRYCE FARNSWORTH (Baker-M., 2013, tet)
I am happy that Bryce's legacy will live
on in the daylily gardens he loved so much at North Dakota State University.
So sorry to hear about Bryce’s passing. He sounds like a great human being and this is a really nice blog post about his work. He will be remembered in gardens across the country.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Bryce will be missed.
ReplyDelete