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Photograph of Murrin Cellar with Beehives on the Brown Fruit Farm is a picture, with genre photograph, agricultural equipment and portraits. Its dimensions are 8.28 in. x 6.08 in..
It was created sometime around 1920-1958.
Murrin Cellar is shown here with his beehives on the Brown Fruit Farm. He was farm manager from 1936 to 1958. His father came to work on the farm in 1913 when he was fourteen years old and attending Worthington High School, and he started working in 1915, becoming full time after his high school graduation. At age 19, he supervised the picking of apples and cherries by crews of transient labor. In 1936, after the deaths of Frame and Marie Brown, the farm’s owners, Murrin worked with their daughter Molly to keep the farm running until 1958. The Cellar family continued to live on the farm property following its closing.
Cellar is pictured here with his beehives. The handwritten note by his son, Bernard (Brownie) Cellar, reads “Dad’s bees (20 colonies) paid for most of my college education ($620 per year).” Brownie graduated from Capital University in 1948.
The Brown Fruit Farm operated north of Worthington for nearly fifty years, from around 1912 to 1958. The farm sold grew and sold apples and apple products such as juice, candy and apple butter, as well as cherries, plums and honey. As of 1925, the farm encompassed 100 acres planted with 4000 fruit trees and was the largest fruit farm in central Ohio. Owned by Frame Brown and later his daughter Molly, it was renowned not only for the quality of its produce, but also for its innovative roadside marketing, including signs telling motorists how many miles they were from the farm.
It covers the topics farm workers and agriculture.
It features the person William Murrin Cellar, 1899-1983.
It features the organization Brown Fruit Farm.
It covers the city Columbus.
The original is in a private collection.
This file was reformatted digital in the format video/jpeg.
The Worthington Memory identification code is wcd0253.
This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on February 21, 2018. It was last updated February 22, 2018.