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  2. Fromm Brothers Fur and Ginseng Farm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fromm_Brothers_Fur_and...

    The Fromm Brothers Fur and Ginseng Farm is a farm complex in the Town of Hamburg, Marathon County, Wisconsin where four brothers pioneered ginseng farming starting in 1904, and used the profits to develop silver fox farming. By 1929 they were the world's largest producer of both products.

  3. Andropogon gerardi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andropogon_gerardi

    Big bluestem is a perennial warm-season bunchgrass. It is tolerant of a wide range of soil conditions. The main roots are 6–10 ft (1.8–3.0 m) deep, and the plants send out strong, tough rhizomes, so it forms very strong sod. [4] Depending on soil and moisture conditions, it grows to a height of 1–3 m (3.3–9.8 ft).

  4. Fur farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fur_farming

    A fur farm in Ostrobothnia, Finland Map of countries that banned fur farming. A mink farm (after 1900) A mink farm in the United States A mink farm in Poland. Fur farming is the practice of breeding or raising certain types of animals for their fur. Most of the world's farmed fur was produced by European farmers.

  5. Gordon Fox Ranch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Fox_Ranch

    The Gordon Fox Ranch is a historic silver fox farming property at 860 West Broadway (United States Route 2) in Lincoln, Maine.Operating from about 1924 to 1940, the property is the best-preserved of a significant number of fox farms established by brothers Frank and Fred Gordon in Lincoln.

  6. Edwin J. Nieman Sr. House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_J._Nieman_Sr._House

    Edwin J. Nieman Sr., the home's owner, was a partner in the Fromm Bros.-Nieman Co., at the time the largest silver fox breeder in the nation; the home originally bordered one of the firm's fox farms on all sides. Nieman lived in the house until he died in 1985.

  7. Digitalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digitalis

    Hendrik Goltzius, A Foxglove in Bloom, 1592, National Gallery of Art, NGA 94900 The generic epithet Digitalis is from the Latin digitus (finger). [8] Leonhart Fuchs first invented the name for this plant in his 1542 book De historia stirpium commentarii insignes (Notable comments on the history of plants), based upon the German vernacular name Fingerhut, [9] [10] which translates literally as ...