John Chapman (September 26, 1774 – March, 1847) was an American pioneer orchardist and Swedenborgian Christian missionary known as "Johnny Appleseed" because he planted apple trees in large parts of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. He was born in Leominster, Massachusetts, and became an American legend while he was still alive, portrayed in works of art and literature. He was an early conservationist, what would be called today an ecologist.
Nathaniel Chapman was an officer during the Revolutionary War, serving in Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania. While he was in the service, his wife died on July 26, 1776 after giving birth on June 18 to a second son, named Nathaniel. This baby died shortly after birth, living perhaps two weeks. Nathaniel Chapman ended his military service in 1780 in Springfield, Massachusetts.
That summer, he married Lucy Cooley of Longmeadow, Massachusetts, with whom he had ten children.
Whole apples can be stored in a root cellar for months, and dried apple sections known as snitz keep indefinitely. Snitz were used to flavor soups and stews, and in such popular entrees as snitz and knep, an apple and pork dish.
The juice could be made into hard cider (sometimes frozen to make applejack or distilled to make brandy), which was the preferred alcoholic beverage in the early American West.Michael Pollan, The Botany of Desire (2001) ISBN 0375501290 - see chapter one Although Chapman himself was a teetotaler as well as a vegetarian, his version of Swedenborgian theology condemned drunkenness, rather than requiring total abstention from alcohol. On the frontier, water supplies were often of questionable quality, and alcoholic beverages could be the healthful alternative.
In addition to the trees transplanted from Chapman's orchards, wild apple trees began to appear. Wildlife stealing windfall apples would deposit some of the seeds they ingested, complete with a nice dollop of fertilizer. Between the unimproved trees from Chapman's orchards and wild apple trees, a number of trees bore better apples, and an explosion of named varieties occurred. Many of today's most popular named varieties first appeared in the 1800s.
When settlers found that young apple trees would be available, they increasingly brought scion wood with them from New England, New York, and Virginia to graft into usable eating varieties.
Johnny owned millions of dollars worth of apple orchards when he died. He would obtain land, paying for it with the promise of apple trees, clear it and plant an orchard, leaving it in the care of a nearby settler who would sell trees on shares. His orchard managers were instructed to sell trees on credit. As settlers were setting down roots in the community, this was sound credit management.
Johnny's outlays were very minimal. He obtained the seed for free from cider mills eager to have new customers. He dressed poorly, even for the frontier, and spent most of his time traveling from home to home on the frontier. He would tell stories to children, spread the Swedenborgian gospel to the adults, and received supper and shelter for the night in return. He would tear a few pages from one of Swedenborg's books and leave them with his hosts.
He made several trips east, both to visit his sister, and to replenish his supply of Swedenborgian literature. He typically would visit his orchards every year or two, and collect his earnings. The majority of earnings during his lifetime were given to his sister, to his church, and to various needy people he came upon.
Johnny was an ascetic of sorts, practicing self-denial. He went barefoot and wore rags, even in the coldest Midwestern winter, and was a vegetarian. Those who propose the Marfan theory suggest that his compromised health may have made him feel the cold less intensely. His long life, however, suggests he did not have Marfan's.
American folklore | Disney animated shorts, 1940s | Swedenborgians | American vegetarians | People from Massachusetts | Barefooters | 1774 births | 1845 deaths
Johnny Appleseed | Johnny Appleseed | John Chapman | Johnny Appleseed | Johnny Appleseed
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