The Doctors Apothecary Garden


“A living exhibit to educate and enlighten

People of all ages about the importance of

Self sufficiency and the intimate connection of

Earlier peoples to the lands they inhabited”.

 

The Doctors apothecary garden is one of two new additions to the campus of the Old Fort House Museum.  The garden was conceived and designed to educate people about the critical importance of plants to both Native and Colonial Americans.  Medicines in this era were most often derived from available plants. 

These plants were collected from the wild or intentionally cultivated.  Colonial Physicians would frequently have a special garden (an Apothecary Garden) adjacent to their homes to supply medicinal plants.   

The garden contains over twenty different species of plants (mostly native) that were known to have been used by Native Americans and Colonials in earlier times. Some of the plant species growing here are New York Ironweed, Toothache tree, Wild Senna, Turtlehead, and Rattlesnake Master. An antique chimney pot sits in the center of the pathway, symbolizing the importance of the hearth in drying and preparing plants for medicine.

 The name: The Doctors Apothecary Garden pays tribute to the many doctors who either owned the Old Fort House or were responsible for saving it as a museum.  Among these Physicians was Dr. John Cochran, who owned the house sometime between 1778 and 1783.  Dr. Cochran was George Washington’s personal surgeon and the first surgeon general of the United States Army.

In 1881 another physician Dr. Robert A. Linendoll purchased the property and owned it until his death around 1900. By 1949 twelve Fort Edward businessmen purchased the Old Fort House with the idea of using it for the benefit of the community.  Among these twelve were 4 local Doctors: 

Another physician Dr. Silas Banker was the first president of the Fort Edward Historical association and one of the first town historians.  To recognize the important relationship of Doctors with the Old Fort House, the garden is named in their honor.

Visitors can arrange for a tour of the garden or take a self guided tour during regular museum hours.

 

The Garden was funded by a grant from the New York Council for the Humanities.