Birth Name: | Ruth Imogen Stout |
Birth Date: | June 14, 1884 |
Birth Place: | Topeka, Kansas |
Death Place: | Redding, Connecticut |
Occupation: | Writer |
Language: | English |
Nationality: | American |
Genre: | Gardening |
Spouse: | Alfred Rossiter (married 1929–1960) |
Relatives: | Rex Stout (brother) |
Ruth Imogen Stout (June 14, 1884 – August 22, 1980) was an American author best known for her "No-Work" gardening books and techniques.
Ruth Imogen Stout was born June 14, 1884,[1] in Girard, Kansas,[2] the fifth child of Quaker parents John Wallace Stout and Lucetta Elizabeth Todhunter Stout.[3] Her younger brother Rex Stout, also an author, was famous for the Nero Wolfe detective stories.
She claimed to accompany Carrie A. Nation in a 'joint hatchetation' where the saloon was smashed up as a protest against the public sale of alcohol. Nation was arrested but Stout, 16 years old at the time, was not and proceeded to deal more damage. Later, on March 9, 1964, she went on I've Got a Secret to tell this story.[4]
Stout moved to New York when she was 18 and was employed at various times as a baby nurse, a bookkeeper, a secretary, a business manager, and a factory worker. She was a lecturer and coordinated lectures and debates, and she owned a small tea shop in Greenwich Village and worked for a fake mind-reading act.[5] [6]
In 1923, she accompanied fellow Quakers to Russia to assist in famine relief.[5] She married Fred Rossiter in June 1929 at age 45.[6] [7] Rossiter, the son of an American businessman, was born in Germany in 1882. His family relocated to New York City in 1894.[8] In March 1930, the couple moved to a 55acres farm in Poverty Hollow, Redding Ridge, on the outskirts of Redding, Connecticut.[8] Rossiter, a Columbia-trained psychologist, followed his passion for wood turning and subsequently became known for his wooden bowls.[8] Stout decided to try her luck at gardening, and in the spring of 1930, she planted her first garden.[9]
During her first year of gardening and for many years after, Ruth employed conventional techniques and practices in her garden with mixed results. She had to wait for someone else to come and plow the fields before she could start. This gentleman was frequently late or delays would occur due to mechanical failures. Wasted time lessened the already short growing season and tried her patience. Furthermore, the manual labor involved in planting a traditional garden became more than she could handle by herself. In the spring of 1944, after following the advice of other gardeners who used commercial fertilizers, "poisonous sprays" and plowing for fifteen years, Stout decided that she wasn't going to wait for the plowman, nor was she going to plow on her own. Instead she planted the seeds and covered them, waiting to see what would happen, and discovered surprising success.[9]
Stout claimed that to be successful her system required a thick mulch of at least 8 inches. She suggests that if starting a new garden in poor soil it is beneficial to plow manure in the first year and then proceed with the mulch, which is to be left on the garden year-round. After the first year, plowing is no longer needed and compost piles are not necessary either - the "compost pile" is maintained in place in the seed beds and garden paths. Mulching material is a combination of what ever one can find at hand, similar to the same materials that one might find in a compost heap.[10]
As the years progressed, Stout refined her techniques, eventually adopting a year-round mulch which virtually eliminated the labor associated with traditional gardening. Her minimalist approach spawned a long-running series of articles in Organic Gardening and Farming magazine as well as several books. Stout wrote under her maiden name but had changed her legal name to Rossiter after getting married.[11]
Her husband, Fred, died on November 24, 1960, after an extended illness.[8] Her sister, Mary, who also lived at Poverty Hollow for over 40 years, died on August 20, 1977, at 88.[12]