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  • Announcer: “Pretty important stuff, grass.

  • Behind every blade there's one of the biggest stories

  • in the world.”

  • Here's a big story for you:

  • the history of the American lawn.

  • Those rows of small green plants

  • that require endless upkeep, host

  • countless communal rituals, and, for many,

  • symbolize the pride of homeownership.

  • All this has made grass the most irrigated plant

  • in the country.

  • But pursuing the perfect lawn has led Americans

  • to dump millions of pounds of pesticides

  • onto their grass, some of which

  • can potentially leach into water supplies.

  • Gas lawnmowers and other equipment

  • have emissions that contribute to climate change.

  • All of this to create land that has

  • limited habitat potential.

  • But check this out.

  • Most of this grass wasn't always here.

  • It's not native to the United States.

  • So how did all this begin?

  • How do we get from pristine wilderness

  • to identical rows of manicured nature?

  • Let's start in the 1600s.

  • Europeans are colonizing America.

  • They bring farm animals.

  • Those animals love the local grass.

  • They love it so much, they consume it all.

  • There's no more left.

  • The animals start to starve.

  • So the colonists import foreign seeds

  • to grow new grass for the animals to eat.

  • Example: You know that famous Kentucky Bluegrass?

  • It covers sports stadiums and countless lawns

  • not from Kentucky.

  • It's actually native to places like Europe and North Africa.

  • So the new foreign grass grows.

  • The colonies grow.

  • Tensions between the colonists and Britain grow.

  • Then there's a revolution.

  • And what's General Washington doing a month

  • after independence is declared?

  • He's writing home to his estate manager

  • about landscaping plans.

  • He's talking about things like flowering shrubs

  • and planting locust trees, making groves.

  • See, Washington and Thomas Jefferson

  • are die-hard fans of European landscape architecture.

  • The rich in Europe are building

  • great, sprawling lawns that have no agricultural value.

  • They're purely status symbols.

  • So Washington and Jefferson help popularize

  • these great lawns in America, but only

  • for those who can afford it.

  • And these lawns come on the backs of slaves.

  • Tools like these keep the grass groomed.

  • It's grueling, endless work.

  • Time goes by.

  • It's the early 1800s when there's

  • a big mechanical innovation in lawn care.

  • An engineer in southwest England

  • is working on machinery for a clothing mill

  • when he gets an idea.

  • Maybe the same mechanics at the clothing mill

  • could work for cutting grass.

  • He's right and files a patent for the first lawnmower

  • in 1830.

  • Lawnmowers reached the U.S. about 40 years later.

  • But for most of America, lawns still aren't all that common.

  • In her bookThe Lawn,” author Virginia Scott Jenkins uses

  • this painting as an example.

  • The ground where these boys play

  • is covered with wildflowers and packed dirt.

  • There's no manicured lawn.

  • But by the 1870s, we also see American culture slowly

  • start to embrace lawns for the privileged masses.

  • Suburbs had begun to grow after the Civil War.

  • Some are designed with large, grassy areas.

  • They're inspired by new urban parks

  • with their own sprawling lawns.

  • Then there's the cultural impact of this highly

  • influential book from 1870, “The Art of Beautifying

  • Suburban Home Grounds.”

  • It tells wealthy suburbanites what

  • needs to be done to have the perfect lawn, in detail.

  • It also tells them that having the perfect lawn

  • is part of what makes a model citizen.

  • After all, the spread of railroads and streetcars

  • means more people are on the move for greater distances,

  • gazing out windows and possibly

  • judging the neighborhoods they travel through.

  • Then just before Christmas in 1871, a man from Buffalo, N.Y.

  • gets some good news.

  • His name is Joseph Lessler

  • and his patent application has been approved.

  • It's for the first sprinkler that

  • connects to a garden hose.

  • And garden hoses are only possible because cities

  • can now pipe water into individual homes

  • on a grand scale.

  • This is when the lawn care market becomes big business.

  • We see ads for mowers that areeasy to operate,”

  • self-sharpening.”

  • The effectiveness of ads gets a boost from advances

  • in color printing and the advent of these so-called

  • trade cards.

  • They're basically like business cards.

  • They pop with color.

  • They advertise the hell out of lawn and garden products.

  • And as more people get flashier ads,

  • those ads change from simply selling tools

  • to selling ideas about the lawn's place in society.

  • Take a look at this trade card from around 1880.

  • What's it telling us?

  • It's selling a lawnmower,

  • that's obvious enough.

  • But look in the background.

  • There's people playing lawn sports.

  • It's a subtle hint that a well-kept lawn

  • can lead to good times, especially

  • for the wealthy, who can afford clothes like these

  • and a house like this.

  • In 1914, The Times publishes a short piece

  • about former President Teddy Roosevelt.

  • The news is he'd just mown his lawn for a day to take

  • a break from politics.

  • It just goes to show that even back then,

  • this idea of yard work as a relaxing pastime

  • is already becoming part of the culture.

  • By the 1920s, something else is becoming a big part

  • of American culture

  • golf.

  • The U.S. Department of Agriculture

  • develops tougher, lower-maintenance grass

  • spurred by demands of golf courses.

  • So the grass gets better and more

  • people have lawns because all those

  • returning World War II veterans get low-cost home loans.

  • And there's more access to suburbs

  • because the interstate system is expanding.

  • Historian Ted Steinberg calls these rows of tidy lawns

  • anoutdoor expression of '50s conformitism.”

  • But that conformitism isn't meant for everyone.

  • “I moved here because it was a white community.”

  • And we understood that it was going to be all white

  • and we were very happy to buy a home here.”

  • People of color often faced discrimination

  • when buying in these new suburbs.

  • Lawns become iconic symbols of an American dream that's

  • recognized by most, but attainable only to some.

  • Those who can, continue to chase the dream.

  • This graph, published by historian Virginia Scott Jenkins,

  • shows the number of lawn care articles appearing

  • in popular magazines over time.

  • The post-World War II lawn boom

  • is here, the beginning of the modern lawn care era.

  • Better technology brings more ways

  • to spend time and money to achieve the perfect lawn.

  • And so it continues.

  • So that's how we got here.

  • If you've ever had to spend your Saturdays mowing lawns,

  • there's a long list of characters you have to thank.

  • About five minutes into the video,

  • I mentioned this Times article about Teddy Roosevelt

  • cutting grass.

  • It's kind of wild that Roosevelt's lawn care was

  • considered news fit to print.

  • So just in case you're curious about this front-page news,

  • let me read part of it to you.

  • Colonel Roosevelt refused to discuss politics today.

  • He got in a lot of good vigorous exercise.

  • For three hours he pushed a lawnmower about on the lawns

  • at Sagamore Hill, and the exercise did not seem to tire

  • him at all.”

Announcer: “Pretty important stuff, grass.

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B1 中級

美國人如何學會愛他們的前院草坪|紐約時報 (How Americans Learned to Love Their Front Lawns | NYT)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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