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Liberty is a hybrid apple cultivar developed by the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station. It was a seedling produced in 1955 from pollinating ' Macoun ' from 'Purdue 54-12' for the sake of acquiring Malus floribunda disease resistances.
Yarlington Mill was said to have first been discovered as a 'wilding' in 1898 by a Mr. Bartlett, who found it growing out of a wall by the mill-race at Yarlington. [1] It was subsequently propagated and popularised by the grower Harry Masters, who also raised the cultivar known as 'Harry Masters' Jersey'.
The cultivar makes a medium-sized tree with a distinctive habit, having several long, unbranching, spreading limbs. [2] It bears in mid season. The small fruit have a strong red flush on a yellow ground, a shape between conical and cylindrical and are of full 'bittersharp' type, being high in tannin and malic acid levels. [1] '
1909 illustrations by Alois Lunzer depicting apple cultivars Golden Sweet, Talmon Sweet, Bailey Sweet and Sweet Bough. Over 7,500 cultivars of the culinary or eating apple (Malus domestica) are known. [1] Some are extremely important economically as commercial products, though the vast majority are not suitable for mass production. In the ...
When Liberty Village opened more than four decades ago in 1981, it enjoyed great success and was expanded in the late 1990s. Every weekend, especially during the holiday season, the parking lots ...
Early Rhode Island Greening apple tree (200 years old) in Foster, Rhode Island, pictured about 1900 'Rhode Island Greening', pictured in 1913. The 'Rhode Island Greening' is an American apple variety and the official fruit of the state of Rhode Island.
The first phase of the 50-acre Village North project, developed by Cincinnati-based firm Clous Road Partners, will feature a 40,000-square-foot Whole Foods building on a corner lot on the south ...
The Newtown Pippin, also known as Albemarle Pippin, is an American apple that originated in the late 17th or early 18th century and is still cultivated on a small scale. [1] At one time, there were two very similar apple cultivars known as the 'Yellow Newtown' ('Albermarle Pippin') and 'Green Newtown' ('Brooke Pippin'), one of which perhaps ...