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The apple emerged as a celebrated fruit
at the beginning of the peopling of Earth. Whether you start with Adam
and Eve or the anthropological data on Stone Age man in Europe, the
apple was there. Greek and Roman mythology refer to apples as symbols of
love and beauty. When the Romans conquered England about the first
century B.C., they brought apple cultivation with them. William Tell
gained fame by shooting an apple off his son's head at the order of
invaders of Switzerland.
The Pilgrims discovered crabapples had
preceded them to America, but the fruit was not very edible. The
Massachusetts Bay Colony requested seeds and cuttings from England,
which were brought over on later voyages of the Mayflower. Other
Europeans brought apple stock to Virginia and the Southwest, and a
Massachusetts man, John Chapman, became famous for planting trees
throughout Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois (his name became "Johnny
Appleseed"). Seeds from an apple given to a London sea Capitan in
1820 are sometimes said to be the origin of the State of Washington
apple crop (now the largest in the U.S.).
As the country was settled, nearly
every farm grew some apples. Although some were very good, most of the
early varieties would be considered poor today. Of nearly 8000 varieties
known around the world, about 100 are grown in commercial quantity in
the U.S., with the top 10 comprising over 90% of the crop.
Our modern orchards combine the rich
heritage of apple growing with research and field trials to grow an
annual U.S. crop exceeding 220,000,000 bushels. New varieties are still
being discovered and cultivated, with the best eventually becoming
"household words" like McIntosh, Delicious, Empire, Rome,
Spartan, Cortland, Granny Smith, etc.. Recent arrivals include Fuji,
Braeburn, Liberty, and more than a few "throwbacks" to antique
varieties now enjoying a resurgence.
It can certainly be said that an apple
combines the best attributes of "something old and something
new".
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