An unexpected vein of Veblen-related research began with an email from a friend at the Princeton Public Library asking me to assist in finding a descendent of Einstein's begonia. Einstein had a begonia he was fond of, and after he died his secretary gave cuttings to physicist friends in Princeton. With a little help from the internet, I was able to learn the story of how cuttings from Einstein's begonia have lived on long after his passing in 1955. A friend also gave me some cuttings, two of which I passed on to people involved in creating an Einstein museum in Princeton.
I thought I was done with my work until a Canadian film director named Charlie Tyrell contacted me. He's making a movie called "Show Me the Past is Real," exploring "the emotional power that objects have over us personally and collectively," and would like to find the actual plant--the "mother plant"--that Einstein himself owned. (One of the creative and moving documentaries that Charlie has done, by the way, is called Broken Orchestra, about a citizen movement to get Philadelphia to restore funding for music in the schools. Watching it is eleven minutes well spent.)
The search for the "mother plant" led me back to my friend Vicki who had supplied me with cuttings, to see if she knew the progression of owners through whom her plants had come. She said she'd contact her source.
For a long time, I heard nothing, and then came an email out of the blue from Norma Smith.
Dear Steve,
My husband and I were walking in the Herrontown Woods near the Veblen house and met you last year, I believe.
My husband AJStewart Smith (83) is a retired professor from the physics department at Princeton University. I was and remain friends with many of the retired physics faculty members and their spouses. The story of the Einstein begonia is as follows:
Mrs. Joan (pronounced Joann) Treiman, the wife of Sam Treiman, a theorist who was a young physics faculty member when Einstein was alive, got a cutting of the Einstein begonia from Einstein’s secretary, Helen Dukas. Joan Treiman gave a cutting to another faculty member’s wife, Eunice Wilkinson. Eunice Wilkinson gave me a cutting and I and my husband (a true gardener) thought the plant was so special that we made many cuttings and started to give cuttings to people who seemed as enthusiastic about the plant as we were. I gave the cutting to Vicky Bergman who was in my aerobics group at the Senior Center, and somewhere over the years we heard even the horticultural department at the university started to call it the “Einstein Begonia”! Joan Treiman died in 2013 at age 87 and I am quite sure she no longer had the plant when she died. Eunice Wilkinson now lives in a retirement center in Boulder, Colorado and no longer has a plant to my knowledge.
We were thrilled to hear what you are doing re Oswald Veblen’s home and the land he donated. My parents were immigrants from Norway and I knew Veblen had Norwegian ancestry so was always interested in stories about him. His uncle Thorstein Veblen had a summer hut on Washington Island, in Door County, Wisconsin; our daughter-in-law’s family lives in Door County and our son and family have a home there so we have made several trips to Washington Island and have read stories about Thorstein’s presence on the island, interesting to look up on google if you don’t already know about them.
Good luck with the wonderful work you are undertaking.
Best wishes, Norma SmithIt was astonishing to hear the whole lineage laid out. Historical research usually involves piecing together bits and pieces from multiple sources over time. Another friend's source for Einstein begonias, Martha Otis, contacted me with essentially the same news: the "motherplant is long gone - only cuttings from cuttings from cuttings etc on and on exist."
I am writing a musical/concept album about the begonia's story and would love to get in contact with anyone who received an original cutting or knows more about the begonia's beginnings. I got a cutting from an elderly relative who has been keeping his Einstein begonia alive for decades. His memories on how he came by it are hazy, and I'm trying to retrace his steps.
ReplyDeleteI have an original cutting and am in contact with the professor emeritus at Princeton who was a student when Einstein taught there.
DeleteIf you're on a computer you should be able to see my contact info to the right of the post under "About Me". Send me an email. I'm not clear on what you're looking for beyond what's in the post.
ReplyDeleteI have had one for 30 years and did not know any of these stories until a friend here in Princeton saw the plant in the background of a photo I posted on FB.
ReplyDeleteNot all angel wing begonias originated with Einstein. Do you remember how you got it?
DeleteA friend who is on the faculty at Princeton asked me to tend to her small Einstein Begonia while her Brooklyn apartment was getting renovated. It was a few inches tall, residing in a 6" pot. I agreed.
ReplyDeleteBut the apartment renovation remains incomplete after 2 1/2 years. The plant thrived in my Sun-filled home, growing to be a 4 ' tall bush. A large arm of the bush broke off during repotting -- I put it in a vase of water, as one might display flowers.
Within a few days that begonia "arm" was putting out roots, so I simply stuck it in another pot of soil, and gave it plenty of water.
Today I have two Einstein Begonias -- both more than 6 feet tall, flowering generously, and showing no signs of slowing down. I hope my friend's apartment renovation is soon completed, as the plants will soon exceed the size of her entry door.
I think an Einsteinian black hole is needed, to swallow the monsters down to size. Alternatively, if I race about my home at high speed, perhaps the plants will disappear from view, as did time for Einstein on his infamous train ride. If Kip Thorne were still around, I'm sure he'd have wisdom to impart.
A delight to hear Laurie Garrett's story, and discover her stellar career in journalism.
ReplyDeleteI have yet to figure out why Einstein begonias sometimes grow compactly, sometimes tall and lanky. Clearly their enthusiasm has had a lot to do with their staying power and ongoing spread from household to household.
I got a cutting from Norma Smith. It grows really tall and seems to be unphased by being cut back. The cuttings live seemingly forever in just water.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment. Norma's great! FYI, for all commenters, there's usually a delay in getting comments posted. Because of all the spam, I have to preview all comments before publishing them.
DeleteI just offered some cuttings of my begonia to a local plant group. I can't wait to see who takes me up on my offer of cuttings. My sister lived in Princeton and received a cutting and then passed on one to me
ReplyDeleteAt an estate sale, I purchased a large angel wing begonia from a family in Crawfordsville, Indiana. Attached was the story that was typed out and included with my begonia:
ReplyDeleteThis begonia is a cutting of a cutting of a cutting from an original plant that belonged to the household of Albert Einstein in Princeton, New Jersey. When that household was broken up sometime after Professor Einstein’s death in 1955, Robert Connor acquired the begonia. The date of this first transfer is unknown. Connor’s stay at Princeton, first as a graduate student and later as a professor in the Classics Department, stretched from the late fifties to the early nineties of the twentieth century
During the eighties, Professor Connor gave a cutting of the begonia to his departmental colleague, Professor Robert Lamberton, and his spouse, Professor Susan Rotroff (then in Classics at Hunter College in New York City). It thrived in their home in Princeton.
Subsequently, Lamberton and Rotroff moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where they are Classics professors at Washington University. They brought with them what had by then become known as “Einstein’s Begonia.” When Joseph Day of the Wabash College Classics Department lectured at “Wash U” in October 2001, he and his spouse and Wabash colleague, Leslie Day, were presented with a cutting of the begonia.
That cutting in turn, has thrived in the Day household in Crawfordsville. This plant is a cutting from that cutting, given by the Days to the Mathematics and Physics Departments of Wabash College to grace the newly renovated Goodrich Hall with a tangible relic of Albert Einstein.
What a great story! Einstein's begonia truly has many wings. Thanks so much!
DeleteI'm so glad your begonia is happy, you bought it at the estate sale my brothers and I had for my parents' belongings. My cuttings that my Dad got growing for me from the plant he was gifted by his friend (a professor at Wabash College) is also pretty happy and growing. Thanks so much for commenting here.
DeleteSmall world. I typed this history and framed it to share with people who visited the building so they would know what they were looking at when I worked in Goodrich. I think the history came to me through the Days when I arrived and started caring for the plant in 2008. The Days are still involved at Wabash so I can ask more, if you like. I am the admin coordinator to Detchon, now, but still at the college. I shared the story with a colleague who moved to Hunter recently, and she shared with me all this research was going on. There are MANY descendants of the plant in Crawfordsville. A local business man, also an alum of the college, has the large display windows of his office building full of very large begonias, who are descended from “that” begonia. There are several cuttings being tended and propagated by the biology department, in addition to the loads of people who heard what it was and asked for a cutting. Wing begonias are nothing, if not prolific (thankfully)! These cuttings are definitely descended, but the plant I cared for in Goodrich that had been around since cut from the ‘01 plant died. Sadly, someone tried to be helpful and overwatered the begonia a couple summers ago, giving it root rot.
ReplyDeleteI love the story of this provenance and to read how the Einstein begonia has thrived and is now shared amongst enthusiasts far and wide. I am wondering if there is a chance that anyone on this thread would be able to share a cutting with me for my project called, "The Artist's Plant Conservatory"? I have been collecting the plants of noted artist's and thinkers for this long term project. Currently there are 10 plants with documented provenance including Vincent Van Gogh, Georgia O'keefe, & Piet Mondrian to name a few. An Einstein Begonia would be a marvelous and welcome addition. Do please let me know if anyone is able to point me in the right direction or help with a cutting for this project. The plants are currently in Brooklyn, NY and Amsterdam, NL. Cheers, Matt Austin
ReplyDeleteI'd be happy to give a cutting. Mines always way too tall. Contact via Steve via Inge
ReplyDeleteI received a cutting in 2018, from a woman who was caring for an Einstein begonia that belonged to a friend who had been a secretary at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton before she retired. I was working at a garden center in Princeton at the time, and she had brought the begonia in to be repotted. This woman’s father had been an artist and friend of Einstein, and had made a portrait of him shortly before Einstein passed away. She generously offered cuttings in exchange for repotting her friend’s plant. The plant grown from mine is now over five feet tall, and I have two smaller plants grown from cuttings off that, plus some more that are rooting and will need new homes soon. Unfortunately I cannot recall the name of the woman who brought the begonia in to be repotted, from whom I received my cutting. She lives in the Princeton area, though. If anyone has information, I’d be delighted if you passed that along.
ReplyDeleteMy friend’s brother was at Princeton in Physics in Grad school and got a cutting of the Einstein begonia. His Mom tended it and her daughter gifted me a cutting. I have two plants now and have given cuttings to at least a dozen friends. And I’m an artist and just did a mixed media piece of Einstein’s begonia! What a special plant!
ReplyDelete