Background
George Taylor was born in the Scottish Borders on 12 February 1803.
George Taylor was born in the Scottish Borders on 12 February 1803.
There, he became known as George "Celery" Taylor because he introduced commercial celery growing to the United States. As a child, Taylor had to watch over the sheep, often snaring rabbits and hares illegally to sell for one shilling and sixpence each, wages for a whole day’s work in those days. Even though he only had a few years of schooling he was an educated man with a great love of books
He used to walk the fifty miles to Edinburgh, which took him fourteen hours, to spend his money on books rather than pay the coach fare.
He learned his trade as a market gardener and in 1846 he became manager of a plant nursery in Kelso. He worked there successfully for nine years.
After seeing families destroyed by drink, he became involved in the Temperance movement which was growing in Britain at that time. He became vice-president of the Temperance Society in Kelso.
His faith also made him speak up against slavery.
There, he started a gardening business and had many plants and trees shipped from Scotland. He gave several addresses to the Horticultural Society of Michigan on hedging and forestry, stressing the need for planting for the future. He was a well-travelled man who journeyed through Scotland, England, Ireland and the United States by rail.
He made his first train journey in 1843 to Ayrshire then to the Trossachs where he met and travelled with Newman Hall (Christopher Newman Hall, known as the Dissenter’s Bishop, who was a notable English Nonconformist).
Taylor’s first sea voyage was to the United States in 1855. In spite of the first sailing ship nearly sinking off Ireland, he returned to Scotland in 1862 and again in 1874, crossing the Atlantic five times in all.
On his train travels he visited the Great Exhibition in London in 1851, the Niagara Falls, Washington and saw the ruins of Chicago a few days after the Great Fire in 1871. Three others died at birth.
Helen Robson in 1837, died in childbirth in 1839.
Jane Dodds in 1842, mother of his six surviving children, died c.1857. Jane Whellans in 1863, died in childbirth in the same year. Susan Carter in 1870, died in 1889.
George Taylor died in Kalamazoo on 21 August 1891.