Mulford Bateman Foster (December 25, 1888–August 28, 1978) was a man known  by many as the "Father of the Bromeliad" as he was instrumental in the discovery  and introduction of many new species of Bromeliad to the United States. He also  devoted his life to hybridizing and contributed widely to the knowledge of the  plant species.He was a man of many talents including naturalist, explorer,  writer, photographer, artist, horticulturist and a well respected landscape  architect in Florida. Numerous bromeliad plants found today are named after  various Foster family members and the genus Fosterella is named in honor of his  work.
 He was born in Elmer, New Jersey to Samuel Preston Foster, Editor of the  Elmer Times and Fannie Bateman a housewife with a green thumb and artistic  leanings. He grew up exploring the woods around his New Jersey home under the  guidance of his mother. With her inspiration, Mulford grew up making his own  small gardens with the wild plants that he had gathered. He eventually started  collecting snakes, lizards and other reptiles whenever he could. He attended  school and graduated in 1905 as salutatorian from Elmer High School spending his  free time out of doors.
 Mulford's father encouraged him to become educated in business, being  concerned that his love of nature would not be profitable. To satisfy this  urging, he attended and graduated from a Philadelphia business school. He worked  for 5 years in the top 2 Philadelphia banks during this training and in the year  following graduation. In 1910 he decided to leave Philadelphia and took a job  with his father's newspaper as Associate Editor back in Elmer, NJ. but within a  year, he was back in Philadelphia.After his 1911 marriage he and his wife  purchased land north of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania at Cold Springs. It was a large  tract of land. Mulford and Fridel lived in a multi-story home with the basement  and an outbuilding devoted to his snakes. It was remote, connected to services  only by a train with a depot near their house and walking path. He had plans of  refurbishing one of the old farmhouses on the property although this never  transpired. According to historians the farmhouse likely burned down sometime in  1919 and the family left Cold Springs sometime after this. During his years at  Cold Springs Mulford kept busy on the property developing the former hotel  grounds, growing an orchard, raising fruits and vegetables, his reptiles and  squab as well as involved in some fashion with the bottling and selling of the  spring water which came from underground sources. In Mulford's time, the  collected spring water and squab would eventually find their way to tables as  far away as Harrisburg and Philadelphia. Additional information has been  collected on the Cold Springs inhabitants of the early 1900’s including the  Fosters and can be found in the book Cold Spring Hotel Site.
 Mulford also worked elsewhere for extra money. He worked as a camp  Naturalist and instructor for Camp Kenebec in Maine where he would go in  mid-summer. In the winter he lectured to schools, colleges and Boy Scout groups  as well as the YMCA. He was already renowned as both a Naturalist and lecturer.  The New Jersey State Board of Agriculture had realized the value of his work and  arranged to send him on a lecture tour around the state to discuss the value of  snakes, lizards and turtles at the Farmer’s Institutes held at the various  counties during the winter shortly after his marriage. He was known to many as  the “Snake Man” having specialized in the reptiles and for that matter all forms  of nature for many years. He was a charismatic speaker and always pleased his  audiences with his enthusiasm and accentuation of humorous and interesting  facts. Newspaper articles stated that he had in his possession the largest  private collection of living reptiles in the state.
 Between the years of 1908-1918 he enjoyed the great influence of Elbert  Hubbard. Hubbard, a writer and publisher of east Aurora, N.Y. had established a  philosophical society which coincided with the developing philosophy held by  Mulford. He was invited to lecture in New York on the top of snakes. The  presentation earned him much favorable publicity because he had live snakes on  stage with him. During the presentation they coiled around his neck, found  refuge in his pockets or slid inside his shirt against his warm body. His motive  was to teach the audience understanding and acceptance toward snakes. He  lectured in many eastern cities and Mulford received publicity from Elbert in  several ways, even having him write the chapter called "Just Snakes" in one of  his books called So Here Then Cometh Pig-pen Pete; Or, Some Chums of Mine.
 While living in Cold Springs he maintained a friendship with another writer  Conrad Richter. Conrad and his wife lived in Pine Grove, PA which was a nearby  town. Letters between the two as well as pictures in possession of the family  reflect a close camaraderie. Conrad once wrote "If anyone has a unique paradise  of his own on earth, that one is Mulford Foster, Master of one of the prettiest  and wildest valleys in Pennsylvania, he has on his immense primeval estate a  limpid lake where wood creatures come down to drink, a magic winding little  river for his silent canoe, a collection of almost every variety of domestic  animal and bird, pet skunks, several dozen kinds of tamed snakes, wild flowers,  trees and shrubs and a million wild creatures that have flocked to his place  from the mountains about because they know that no harm can come to them here,  and Foster attired in brown flannel and stealing noiselessly through the woods  with the light foot and deftness of a Mohican, is all day long and often at  evening out among them.”.
 In 1918 an opportunity presented itself that intrigued him with a training  course offered by the Davy Tree Expert company in Kent, Ohio. Since he already  had an affinity with trees it was a simple step to learn how to sell tree  service to the people who had large estates in the area of Baltimore, Washington  and Virginia. He remained the Davy company representative of these three states  during the years 1918-1923.
 [edit] Landscape Architect
 While working for the Davy Tree Company he began entertaining the idea of  changing professions and with his prior passion for growing and designing  gardens in his youth, he liked the prospect of becoming a landscape architect.  He bought as many books on the subject and began teaching himself the art. In  1923 he moved his family to Florida and began establishing himself as a well  respected landscaper, first in Palm Beach where he was in charge of landscape  design with Exotic Gardens, then moving to Orlando, Florida. Many Orlando  businesses and estates have Mulford's artistic mark on them still present to  this day. A few of the important landscape projects done between 1925 and 1958  include Lancaster Park, a subdivision in Orlando, FL (1925); the ranch house  grounds for Horseshoe Ranch, a 10,000 acre ranch on the Kissimmee River, Florida  (1925); the Episcopal Cathedral Church of St Luke downtown Orlando (1925) where  he provided the original landscape design (with his son Bert revamping the  historic church in 1987); Poinsetta Park in Winter Haven, FL (1926); Ivanhoe  Shores, subdivision in Orlando, Fl (1926); Azalea Park, Orlando, FL (1935); The  Herlong Estate in Leesburg, FL (1938); The Orlando Garden Club, Orlando, FL  (1958); the Floating Islands at Leesburg, FL (1953-1958) during which Foster  moved a six trunk date palm from 718 Magnolia to Leesburg. He won a design award  for this project in 1953. Photographs and news clippings of his accomplishments  are among the records at UCF; a large interior tropical garden at the American  Mutual Liability Insurance Company, Wakefield, Massachusetts (1957) as well as  designed and supervised planting of the grounds of the Clarkstown Country Club,  Nyack, NY (1932-1934) and Marine Studios at Marineland, Florida (1937-1938)  where he supervised the planting and rock gardens as well as working directly  with the building and architects, as well as the engineer. Records relating to  this project including photographs of the actual landscaping in progress along  with the completed project and original brochure can be found among the UCF  collection
 When discussing his artistic career at age 86 he reminisced that he never  intended to be an artist. His wife reported to the newspaper interviewer that  “it just welled up out of him”. Mulford recalled that his first paintings were  done on frosted windowpanes in New Jersey. Then in his early twenties he started  experimenting with photography. This led directly into his early formal  painting. A Graflex camera became his constant companion on field trips  exploring for snakes, the primary subject on his film of those early days. It  was at this time that he inevitably he saw the wildflowers in fields and  forests. He experienced the light and shadow of the open and sheltered places.  He wasn’t able to always capture what he saw and felt on film. He eventually  found the answer in painting.
 Once he lived in Florida he began taking photos of large estates including  their grounds, their gardens, their specimen plants, the vistas as seen through  their gates and sold them for extra income. The owners often voiced the thought  that they wished they could be in color as these were the days before color film  or digital cameras. To add color he used cotton twisted on a toothpick dipped in  paint. In tinting he had to get acquainted with artist oils. He saw details of  leaves and bark. He saw the natural arrangements of branches and trunks and this  made him think about structure. Soon he had made the step from shading  photographs to actual painting. His first painting was a canvas of a garden  scene with a wall and large vases. It was hung in a Baltimore Show. From that  painting forward he made time to paint. It was realistic work, always of plants.  His early paintings in 1923 were categorized as Photographic. From there he  began painting his series labeled Realistic paintings from 1925-1928. An unknown  artist friend looked at one of his early efforts and made the comment that he  did not have to paint every leaf. The period of details however survived until  1928 when the paintings became more stylized under the tutelage of Leopold  Stokowski. This experience came about when Stokowski, a long-time friend of Mrs.  Bovington, then employing Mulford as a landscape architect for her estate, told  her he was looking for someone to accompany the family to Europe. Knowing the  two individuals, she immediately recommended Mulford who accepted eagerly.  Stokowski took him to Switzerland, France and Italy where they spent most of the  summer of 1928 in the Alps.Stokowski was eager to see Europe through Mulford’s  eyes. He viewed life in a different way than Stokowski had experienced before.  It was Mulford’s great pleasure to explain plant life from his philosophical  point of view. Stokowski was the disciplinarian for Mulford. He required a  painting every day from him. It was almost by the demand of Stokowski that  Mulford created over forty impressions of his experience that summer, the major  portions being the French Alps in and around Haute Savoir. These paintings were  compiled in a book Stokowski Sees that was privately printed but not published  and the book is currently held by Michael Spencer who is still deciding on its  future, although many drawings and paintings are held by family members from  this era and his memories are recollected in memoir accounts. After his return  from Europe he continued to paint with his new found skills and outlook.
 Between the years 1928-1932 he painted a group of paintings he called  Stylized. In his Orange Grove painting he used familiar motifs in a highly  stylized rendition of orange groves found everywhere at the time in Florida. The  round form of the orange tree mimicked by the round oranges themselves broken up  by the lines of palm fronds, fences and crates. The lake is repeating the line  of the arched trunk hanging over it. The grouping of leaves each is repeating  cleverly the whole form of the lake. The ornamental form of Euphorbias was a  persistent stimulus which produced three important paintings. In one, Euphorbia  expressed a freer flowing style with its long undulating branches waving as a  Bali dancer would, leading to the creation of The Dancers. In fact the Bali mask  in the painting suggests a comparison. The very young Bali girls perform their  ceremonial dances by undulating motion of the arms rather than of the feet or  body. Mulford tried to show that the plant does the same thing in ten years what  the Bali dancer can do in ten minutes. The motion of the plant is solidified and  has the duration of many years, while the dance of the little girl is observed  in but a fleeting glimpse of each movement. It is a unity of life’s expressions  with each form finding its happiness in expressing its rhythm within the limits  of its timing. Another painting, Polynesian took as its pivot the five points of  a talkative Stapelia whose form symbolizes heaven and sun. The pattern of the  plant was echoed in the Polynesian tapa cloth which was the inspiration for the  painting and is seen in the background. The angular Padilanthus was used as well  to compose symphony of harmonious form. The idea of the painting was to build a  symphonic interpretation of these motifs from their original primitive  representations, reappearing again in living form. The few simple motifs are  found repeated in each object with a natural simplicity which the artist has  caught and tried to reproduce. Between the years 1930 and 1935 Mulford’s  paintings took on a combination of stylized and decorative style. The  Philosophical series was started between 1932 and 1936. In Self Defense, every  living thing has its own protection. This begins with the flowering date palm  and its maze of thousand spikes or thorns pointing in every direction guarding  reproduction from conception to maturing of egg cells that we call seeds or  fruit. After this painting was completed, Mulford made a frame to hold it but  immediately the frame seemed to defeat the purpose of the expression to be  illustrated. The palm was confined. This led to painting the fronds on the  frame, extending them up and out of the frame. He helped develop the Nyack  Country Club in New York between the years 1932-1934. He used elephants to move  and plow the dirt. Being the sensitive man that he was he observed that each  elephant had his own personality and it was reflected in their eyes. His  elephant painting reflects this insight. In Mimicry the artist sympathetically  depicts the parallel relationship between one of the lizard’s mannerisms and  that of the Anthurium. The little tendrils and feet of the lowest white leaved  vine compared to the little feet of the lizard. The appearance is very much the  same. The leaves and flower in the painting represents the Aracae family, of  which the calla lily is a member. They are among the earliest and simplest forms  of plants. The lizard as well is a very early and simple form of the reptiles.  The painting is filled with subtle repetitions with colors suggesting a deep  primeval forest with its many hidden forms. He described the motivation behind  the Climbers. It had been motivated by a huge, old, gnarled vine growing outside  his studio at Tropical Arts. The vine in his painting climbs up the tree trunk  for light and air. A small tendril is the intelligence part of the vine. It is  the guide for its motivation. Likewise the small tender tongue of the snake is  the sensitive ear and nose which guide the snake to quiet resting places. The  parallel means of motivation of these two forms create the similar shape of  their bodies and a similar type of intelligence. The vine and snake are both  elemental and early forms of life, assembled in harmonious composition in this  painting. His series Impressions of Mexico was completed between 1936 and  1938.
 By 1936 he was almost entirely painting on wood such a flat application of  oil paint that even artists asked him if he painted in tempera. He had painted  on canvas but with the painting of his plant subjects he felt closer to the  earth if he worked on wood. One medium that he used and was very skilled was  painting in oil on rice pith. This is very thin, like tissue paper although not  paper at all but rather the pith of the rice plant cut under water by the  Japanese. So deft was his use of oil on this transparent, lighter than air  substance that there were often accusations that it surely could not be done  with oil. The Japanese frequently used tempera on rice pith so everyone assumed  he was using it as well.
 While Mulford was exploring South America, he initially would paint his  renditions of the plants that he and Racine had collected including the flowers  and fruit found. In the beginning he used oils which meant carrying around the  tubes of paint as well as having to let the pictures dry each night. In South  America this had its disadvantages when the weather was wet or temperatures too  cold to allow the oil paintings to dry. He subsequently went to colored pencils  which eliminated the need for drying, could be done quickly and simplified the  supplies he needed to carry around.
 During the decades of the 1950’s and 1960’s while much of Mulford’s time  was spent exploring, collecting, writing, cultivating, and designing yards he  also managed to paint. His final painting series was called Synthesis and was  completed over the years 1950-1966. He continued to do sketches and smaller  works but Palm Family, Orchid Family and Cactus Family were his last serious  paintings. It is this last series that prompted the name “passionate plant  lover”. He ultimately held a showing at the Art Center of Maitland in September  1975 exhibiting all his paintings including all the series from the Photographic  to the Synthesis. The Foster estate donated Mulford's last series of paintings  to the Harry P. Leu Gardens where they are part of a permanent art  exhibit.
 Mulford had the reputation of being the first hybridizer of the great  self-heading philodendron after bringing it to the US in 1940 and as a  hybridizer had extensive demands to maintain. In 1951 he received the Herbert  Medal for his work and discoveries in amaryllis. In 1962 he received a citation  from the American Horticultural Society Congress for contributions to the  knowledge of bromeliads. He has more than forty notable crosses of bromeliads  and amaryllids. The principal bromeliads that were hybridized were confined to  the billbergia and vrieseas subfamilies. One popular hybrid was the Billbergia  'Muriel Waterman' (Billbergia horrida var. tigrina which he crossed in 1946 and  it first flowered in 1950. He had significant influence in the world of  bromeliad growers and popularized the use of the term "pups" for naming the  offshoots of bromeliads. He ran the Tropical Arts Nursery in Orlando, Florida  located at 718 N. Magnolia on the corner of Magnolia and Colonial Drive along  with the Latch String tea room and his art studio between the years  1924-1957.The business of growing and cultivating his plants took hours of his  time. In 1953 he and his wife, Racine purchased 12 acres of property north of  town and named it "Bromel-La" and 6 years later their house was built and they  moved on to the land. He had two greenhouses built each 30 X 60 feet. The  property would be a showcase and sanctuary of plants that had been both  collected as well as his hybrid bromeliads during the 20 years that he and  Racine owned the land. It had been hoped that after his death the property would  remain a safe haven for bromeliads but the monies for this purpose were never  raised and it was sold to private sources.
 Mulford began traveling to Mexico in 1935 taking his first trip with Tibor  Pataky, an artist friend. This trip was written about in his book Adventures in  Mexico.He returned with Racine, his second wife in 1936 and began making  frequent trips to South America over the next twenty years. Mulford had a great  interest in finding both new and old species of plants that could be used as  both indoor decorations and landscape material. In 1938 Mulford made a Cuban  expedition and from this trip he introduced Agave caribbea to Florida. Around  this same time Mulford met Lyman Smith who was working at Harvard’s Gray  Herbarium, being referred to him by sources in the Smithsonian. Lyman ultimately  would be of help with the identification and classification of the bromeliads  that Mulford would be collecting. It is Lyman Smith who directed him to Brazil  as he had himself been there and collected specimens. Mulford had initially  expressed an interest in exploring Dutch Guiana Mulford’s and Racine’s book  Brazil, Orchid of the Tropics, a long out of print book but available through  used sources was a well told story of their 1940 trip to Brazil. The book was a  success and its completion brought the artful teamwork that was to mark the  relationship between Racine and Mulford. His keen vision, liveliness and  resourcefulness balanced with her devotion and help in caring for all of the  plants and helping organize his materials, keep fastidious notes of her own were  replicated many times over the years with many projects. In 1939 Mulford set off  to Brazil again for six months covering much better known areas than their  previous trip. Mulford was again able to find new species in places that were  supposedly already previously explored and declared exhausted by prior  collectors over the previous one hundred and fifty years. Mulford recollected a  number of “lost” species during his trips to Brazil. He introduced the brilliant  yellow flowering tree, Tabebuia umbellate to North America. This tree is now  famous in Orlando, Florida. In 1940 he made his second six month expedition to  Brazil and Trinidad this time specializing on bromeliads, orchids and  philodendrons. From this trip he introduced many new bromeliads and the now  famous self-heading philodendrons. World War II put a stop to further  expeditions for some years. Mulford turned his attention to cultivating and  popularizing the bromeliads. He continued to work with Lyman Smith who continued  to describe and identify the bromeliads that had been brought back from Brazil  in the preceding years. In 1946 Mulford resumed his expeditions. From Brazil he  brought back the begonia acetosa and introduced it to US gardeners. He and  Racine also traveled to Columbia. This trip followed the earlier trail of the  famous Edouard Andre to confirm and add to his discoveries 75 years before.  These were considered one of the most important bromeliad areas of Latin  America. In 1948 he made a plant expedition around South America collecting in  Dutch Guiana, Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia Costa Rica, Cuba, Puerto  Rico and Trinidad. Several years later in 1951 he would leave on a Venezuelan  plant expedition. This was followed in 1954 to Jamaica with his final plant  collecting trip made to Mexico in 1957. During these trips Mulford not only  collected thousands of herbarium specimens for the Gray Herbarium of Harvard  University and the Smithsonian Institution of Washington, DC where all of the  scientific data is now on file but he also collected thousands of seeds and live  plants to enrich the variety for Florida gardens.
 The following is a list of the various South American locations that  Mulford was known to have traveled for plants outside the U.S., frequently with  his wife Racine at his side. The process of collecting and preserving the  specimens was rigorous and well documented in existing records.
 Brazil 
 Peru 
 Bolivia 
 Ecuador 
 Panama 
 Costa Rica 
 Mexico 
 Puerto Rico 
 Columbia 
 Dutch Guiana 
 Cuba
 
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