Roxbury Russet

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'Roxbury Russet' apples at a market Roxbury Russet.jpg
'Roxbury Russet' apples at a market
Pomological Watercolor POM00000500.jpg
Pomological Watercolor POM00000501.jpg
Two watercolor illustrations of Roxbury Russet

The 'Roxbury Russet' is an apple cultivar, believed to be the oldest apple cultivar bred in the United States, having first been discovered and named in the mid-17th century in the former Town of Roxbury, part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony southwest of (now part of) Boston. [1] It is known by several other names including 'Boston Russet', 'Putnam Russet', and 'Sylvan Russet'. [2]

Contents

It is a greyish-green russet apple known for its good winter-keeping qualities, as well as its suitability for making cider and juice. It is not widely grown or commercially available due to general commercial disfavor for russet varieties; the dull and heavily marked face makes it hard to sell now. [1] It is available from growers who specialize in heirloom plants. It ripens from September to October, [3] and so is commonly available in autumn in farmers markets in the Northeast. Each apple contains 12.87% sugar that ferments to 6% alcohol in hard cider production. [4]

Propagation wood of 'Roxbury Russet' (it propagates by grafting) was taken to Connecticut soon after 1649. [2] Thomas Jefferson planted a number of 'Roxbury Russet' trees in Monticello's South Orchard in 1778. [9]

The Roxbury Russet apple was one of the varieties grown by Major General Israel Putnam on his farm in Pomfret, Connecticut. His grandson, also named Israel Putnam, introduced this variety to the Ohio Valley in 1796. The grandson received a total of 23 varieties of apple from Connecticut in that year, most of which probably came from his grandfather's farm. The Putnam Russet (Roxbury Russet) was considered to be the best and most profitable winter apple of all the varieties received, and was regarded as a good "keeper" (an important characteristic in an age before refrigeration). [10] And not only a good keeper, but if we are to believe Nathaniel Hawthorne, one that improves with age. For in The House of the Seven Gables, Uncle Venner remarks, “But I suppose I am like a Roxbury russet, – a great deal the better, the longer I can be kept.”

Current cultivation

Scionwood

Fruit

The historic Shirley-Eustis House museum in Roxbury, Massachusetts, was planted in 1993 with five 'Roxbury Russet' apple trees. [11]

Verellen Orchard in Romeo, Michigan grows Roxbury Russett apples, available at their road-side farm stand. Other orchards include the following:

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References

  1. 1 2 "UMass Cold Spring Orchard". Coldspringorchard.com. Retrieved 2011-12-29.
  2. 1 2 Beach, S.A.; Booth, N.O.; Taylor, O.M. (1905), "Roxbury", The apples of New York, vol. 1, Albany: J. B. Lyon, pp. 293–295
  3. Creighton Lee Calhoun Jr. (21 December 2010). Old Southern Apples, Revised & Expanded. Chelsea Green Publishing. pp. 136–137. ISBN   978-1-60358-294-0 . Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  4. "Vintage Virginia Apples". Vintage Virginia Apples. 2006-10-07. Archived from the original on 2012-01-15. Retrieved 2011-12-29.
  5. Warder, American Pomology
  6. Downing, Fruits and Fruit-Trees of America, 1885
  7. Beach, The Apples of New York, 1905
  8. Warder, American Pomology
  9. "Monticello Explorer: Roxbury Russet Apple (Malus cv)". Explorer.monticello.org. Retrieved 2011-12-29.
  10. "The first Grafted Apple in Ohio," Ohio Cultivator, p. 115, Vol. 1-2, Columbus, Ohio, 1845.
  11. Archived December 3, 2008, at the Wayback Machine