Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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. It was first released to the public in 1978. [1]
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] '
When his body was returned to his wife, she found stolen apples in his pockets and threw them onto a rubbish heap. One of the resulting seedlings bore apples of a deep, blood red. This tree gave rise to the cultivar that was named after the unfortunate ploughman. [64] Eating PickE mid-September. Use September - November. Blue Pearmain [7] [9 ...
C. Calville Blanc d'hiver; Cameo (apple) Campanino; Cap of Liberty (apple) Cellini (apple) Champion (apple) Chelmsford Wonder; Chisel Jersey; Cider apple; Civni apple
In January 2022, after being chosen as the site’s redeveloper, George Vallone, president of HBC Liberty Village, speculated the first townhomes could "go up" in the middle of 2023, with the ...
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 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 ...
Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery Church is the former burial site of Peter II of Yugoslavia, who until 2013 was the only European monarch buried on U.S. soil.. The land that is now Libertyville was the property of the Illinois River Potawatomi Indians until August 1829, when economic and resource pressures forced the tribe to sell much of their land in northern Illinois to the U.S ...