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History in a nut shell
It was in 1924 when a young and enthusiastic headmaster
and horticultural teacher in Limmen village in the
Kennemerland district, in the province of North Holland
in The Netherlands, notices with an ever increasing
pace how historical flower bulbs, quite some with
name and fame, were threatened with extinction. His
name was Pieter Boschman. He started collecting these
historical cultivars in his garden around the schoolhouse
and the headmaster’s residence; next to the
picturesque parish church of this bulb growers village.
After four years there is not a single nook left in
his garden, stocked with over 400 different varieties
of tulips and some daffodils. Even the neighbouring
roadsides were planted with his bulbs.
Pieter Boschman
At that same time, Pieter Boschman happens to meet
the well-known hyacinth hybridizer Dr Willem Eduard
de Mol from Amsterdam, by coincidence. Willem de Mol
teaches at a secondary modern school next to his research
activities. Later he works amongst others at Columbia
University in the United States. Willem de Mol also
avails of a highly interesting bulb collection: historical
hyacinths from after 1830. Both were running out of
space. Boschman’s youth friend Nicolaas Blokker,
in the mean time running a successful bulbgrowers
and export firm, the Van ‘t Hof & Blokker
company, offers them 1928 to plant both collections
on a plot of his vast nursery. They accept this warm-hearted
offer with both hands. The two bulb devotees baptize
their new combined collection: the Hortus Bulborum.
Decades follow with more and less spectacular moments
and developments. However, the collection gradually
grows. When Van ’t Hof & Blokker moves about
fifty years later to the nearby Heiloo village, the
Hortus Bulborum follows its generous host.
Recognition
In 1988 the Hortus Bulborum is invited to participate
in the Dutch Botanic Garden Collections Foundation
[DBGCF]. This umbrella organisation gathers all the
important botanical collections of The Netherlands.
Among its primary goals are the conservation and improvement
of the living plant collections that are of scientific,
cultural, historic and/or social importance, and safeguarding
the biodiversity. Also of great importance is to foster
the genebank function of these collections. This invitation
is a well-earned recognition for all those volunteers
that have maintained the collection of the Hortus
Bulborum during many decades. Four years later the
bulbs return to their maternal grounds, to the fields
behind the little village church. At the spot where
Boschman’s primary school is also located. For
the first time in its existence the bulb collection
gets a garden of its own, complete with a monumental
entrance gate, a garden house and a bulb barn annex
information centre.
Public at large
From that moment onwards the Hortus Bulborum, till
that time in particular an attraction and pollen bank
for the bulb trade, focus itself more and more to
the public at large. The Hortus Bulborum celebrated
its 75th anniversary in 2003. In over three quarters
of an age the private bulb collection of Pieter Boschman
grew into a unique gene bank, a cultural-tourist jewel
and a second to none treasure trove of spring bulbs
on the globe.
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