Helen Van Pelt Wilson

Helen Van Pelt Wilson
Born Helen Van Pelt Wilson
(1901-10-19)19 October 1901
Collingswood, New Jersey, United States
Died 30 September 2003(2003-09-30) (aged 101)
Wilton Connecticut, United States
Resting place Colestown Cemetery
Occupation Garden writer
Nationality American

Helen Van Pelt Wilson (October 19, 1901 – September 30, 2003) was a noted twentieth-century American garden writer and the daughter of John O. Wilson.

Early life

Helen Van Pelt Wilson was born in Collingswood, New Jersey and grew up in Moorestown Township, New Jersey, attending the Shipley School to prepare for Bryn Mawr College. She graduated cum laude from Bryn Mawr in 1923. Wilson taught English and Latin at Mount Holly High School for one year, and in 1924 married Arthur Collins, Jr. She created her first garden at their home in Moorestown.[1]

Writing career

Wilson began writing about houseplants and gardens for the Philadelphia Record. For Parents Magazine, she wrote about education, marriage and parenting. Over the course of her writing career, Helen Wilson contributed to Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, Scribner’s, House Beautiful, House and Garden, Flower Grower, and Better Homes and Gardens. Wilson collaborated with New York Times Garden Editor Dorothy Jenkins in 1942 on her second book on houseplants. She became an executive editor for nonfiction books at M. Barrows and Company in New York City, specializing in gardening books. She also worked as an editor for Morrow, D. Van Nostrand, and Hawthorn Books.

Wilson also wrote many books of her own. Among the most well-known are Perennials Preferred, Joy of Geraniums, The Fragrant Year, with Leonie Bell, Houseplants are for Pleasure, and Successful Gardening in the Shade. Perhaps her most famous book was The African Violet, published in 1948. Wilson wrote a book about her own garden at Stony Brook Cottage in Westport, Connecticut in 1973, Helen Van Pelt Wilson’s Own Garden and Landscape Book. In 1978, she published her twentieth book, Color for Your Winter Yard and Garden. She wrote, “Apparently I am the last friend that winter has; it is the season I most enjoy.”

In addition to her many books and articles, Wilson compiled The Garden Calendar and The Flower Arrangement Calendar for twenty years. She also compiled two books of poetry, The Gardener’s Book of Verses and Joyful Thoughts for Five Seasons.

Death

Helen Van Pelt Wilson died in Wilton, Connecticut, on September 30, 2003. She was buried in Colestown Cemetery in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. At the time of her death, Wilson had one daughter, Cynthia, two grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.[2]

Legacy

Helen Wilson was listed in Who’s Who of American Women and Foremost Women in Communications. She was a fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society of Great Britain and a recipient of a Bronze Medal Award from the African Violet Society of America.

The Library of Congress lists 51 books written or edited by Helen Van Pelt Wilson. Several of the books were updated and multiple editions exist of some titles.

Books written

Books written, compiled, or co-authored by Helen Van Pelt Wilson include:

References

  1. Staff. "Wilson, Helen Van Pelt", Westport News (Connecticut), October 24, 2003. Accessed November 17, 2013. "Born in Collingswood, N.J., Oct. 19, 1901, she grew up in nearby Moorestown, went to the Shipley School in Bryn Mawr and graduated cum laude from Bryn Mawr College in 1923."
  2. Bryn Mawr College Alumni Association
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