Apple trees were the most popularly grown fruit tree in colonial America and practically every settlement farm and
backyard gardener planted this easily grown fruit tree, or easier, the
seed of the apple could be planted to establish a permanent food supply.
Growing these apple tree products could be eaten fresh or could be
dried and preserved in many different ways to eat at a later time.
Historical instances on the existence of apple trees are documented from
folklore, legends, stone images on carved tablets, petrified slices of
apples on plates for tomb offerings, and overwhelming numbers of
references from Hebrew Bible scriptures and innumerable writings from
poetry, songs, literary publications, and many other surviving accounts
of all civilizations in the ancient world. One of the earliest
archaeological evidences of apple tree fruit comes from the remains of
excavations from Jericho, Jordan, that has been dated 6500 BC by
radiochemical analysis of carbon atoms.
The petrified remains of apple slices that
were found in a saucer of an ancient Mesopotamian tomb, the burial site
of royalty dates back to 2500 BC and was uncovered in southern Iran. In
the ancient historical accounts of the fruit of the apple tree, there
appears to be an incomprehensible trail of evidence that no other fruit
could match. The interest shown in apples by the Greek and Roman
philosophers, poets, historians, and literary masters was even extended
to Renaissance painters, royal chefs to the Tsar's of Russia and too
many other references to mention.
In colonial America, apple trees were grown
and planted from seeds in orchards by William Blackstone at Boston,
Massachusetts in the 1600’s. Early documents on file at the National
Library in Washington, DC suggest that all land owners in Massachusetts
had begun growing apple trees by the 1640’s.
William Bartram, the famous explorer and
botanist, wrote in his book, Travels, “I observed, in a very thriving
condition, two or three large apple trees” in 1773, while traveling near
Mobile, Alabama. It is important to realize that these large apple
trees found growing in Alabama in 1773 could very easily have been grown
from the seed planted by Creek Indians. Those seed may have been
obtained by the Indians from American colonists on the Eastern coast of
the United States at a much earlier time or from French farmers who
settles in areas of agricultural land grants north of Mobile. General
Oglethorpe planned in 1733 to plant “various plants, subtropical and
temperate, which might prove valuable for Georgian farms and orchards,”
according to William Bartram in his book Travels, published 40 years
later. William Bartram’s father, John Bartram, trip to “East Florida”
(Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas) was, in part at least, an attempt
to inventory the plant resources of England’s new acquisition after
expelling the Spanish from East Florida.
Many modern botanists believe that the
improved apple that we know today descended from the crabapple that is
commonly inter planted with apple trees for cross pollination. Old
documents record that fact “cultivated apples descended from crab-tree
or wild apple-Pyrus malus.” Wild crabapple tree seeds appeared on the
list of collected seeds in the Plant List of 1783 of William Bartram and
his father, John Bartram. In William Bartram’s book, Travels in 1773,
he “observed amongst them (fruit trees) the wild crab (Pyrus coronaria)
in his explorations near Mobile, Alabama. Robert Prince established the
first operating nursery in the American colonies at Flushing, New York,
in the 1700’s, where he offered apple trees for sale at his nursery that
was visited by General George Washington, who later became the first
President of the United States. President Thomas Jefferson was planting
and growing apple trees at his fruit tree orchard in Monticello,
Virginia, in the early 1800’s.
The legendary Johnny Appleseed was responsible
for the rapid development of the apple trees growing and planting when
he established a nursery in the Midwest that sold both apple trees and
seed to be planted for growing into trees in the 1800’s. Over 2000
cultivars of apple trees are listed as being grown today, many of the
trees resulting from the huge apple seed dispersion that was begun by
the memorable ambition of Johnny Appleseed to entirely cover the
landscape of America with the fruit of apple trees.
Over the centuries, apple trees became
susceptible to many disease problems such as fire blight; however, Dr.
C.S. Crandall from the University of Illinois performed several back
crosses that involved modern cultivars and the apple tree ancestor
‘crabapple,’ Malus floribunda. The wild crabapple contained an immunity
factor within its genetic composition towards all major bacterial and
fungal diseases of apple trees. In 1989, researchers from the pomology
department at Cornell University extracted an immune fire blight gene
from a nocturnal moth and transplanted it into an apple fruit, resulting
in the total defeat of fire blight in that particular apple tree
cultivar.
Fruiting of apple trees is perhaps the most
troublesome characteristic experienced by an orchardist or a backyard
fruit tree gardener. Most cultivars of apple trees require cross
pollination of two separate varieties in order to set fruit on the tree.
It is necessary that the blossoms of the two
apple tree flowers develop pollen at the same time, in order that fruit
will be set, which can be a tricky problem to correct. The simplest
solution to pollinate apple trees is to use the ancestor of the modern
day apple cultivars, the crabapple, which sheds its pollen over a long
period of time and easily overlaps the apple tree cultivar flowering
period. Crabapple trees produce a fruit that is much smaller than the
common apple, but it can be used in cooking in various ways, and it is
loved by wildlife in the fall and winter when wildlife food is scarce
for animals and birds. Crabapple trees are also valuable when used as
flowering trees that begin blooming in early spring with huge clusters
of pink, white, and even red blossoms. Several outstanding grafted
flowering tree selections are available, such as: Brandywine, Red
Perfection, Radiant, and Spring Snow.
Apple trees are easy to grow, and if a
gardener purchases a large tree, he may experience fruit development
even on the first year of planting and growing. The selection of the
proper cultivar of grafted apple trees is extremely important, because
even though the apple fruit can be grown in most areas of the United
States, the trees require different amounts of chilling temperatures in
order to flower. The interesting introduction of low chill cultivars
from Israel makes it possible to experience apple growing and planting
as far south as Florida. Certain popularly grown cultivars of apple
trees in the United States today are: Arkansas Black, Gala, Granny
Smith, Red Rome, Anna, Red Fuji, Yates, Golden Delicious, Red Delicious,
Anna, Ein Shemer, and Golden Dorsett. Apples contain some mysterious
quality that can preserve it from deterioration for centuries. Apple
slices can be dried and kept delicious for long periods of time. This
mysterious characteristic may be recognized by man’s association of
paradise being connected and related to Eve and Adam picking apples from
a fruit tree growing in paradise for their eternal pleasure, that was
planted by God and described as the tree of life at the fabled Garden of
Eden. We see this fruit of paradise recurs in the history of many other
ancient civilizations. A similar account that we read as children in
the book of Genesis from the scriptures in the Hebrew Bible.
Perhaps this mysterious genetic quality of
apples in preservation makes it so important as providing medical
benefits backed up by that memorable proverb, “an apple a day keeps the
doctor away.” Experiments from researchers in California have shown that
apple fruit is very rich in antioxidants, a biological compound that
combats, stroke, heart disease, and many other health problems.
UK online floristThe interest shown in apples by the Greek and Roman philosophers, poets, historians, and literary masters was even extended to Renaissance painters, royal chefs to the Tsar's
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