Apples of Your Eye
Fruit sleuths and nursery owners are fighting to save our nation's apple heritage...before it's too late
- By Tim Hensley
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2002, Subscribe
Sixteen years ago, when I worked at The Planters & Designers garden center in Bristol, Virginia, old-timers frequentlycame in and asked for apple varieties called Virginia Beauty and Yellow Transparent. I tried to look them up infruit tree catalogs, but I could never find them. The more they asked me, the more intrigued I became. Though I came from along line of nursery men, I knew little about fruit varieties ofthe past, a subject called historical pomology.
Of course, that was before Henry Morton drove into the gravel parking lot at the garden center in the spring of 1988. He was wearing blue jeans and a button-downshirt; I figured he was a customer who had come to buy a rose bush and a bag of manure and be on his way. But Morton, a Baptist preacher from Gatlinburg, Tennessee, slapped me on the back, cornered me in the blue rug junipers and proceeded to try to sell me a Limbertwig. A Limbertwig?
"Limbertwigs vary in size, shape, color, quality and tree habit," said Morton, "but they all have one distinguishing characteristic, and that is their distinct Limbertwig flavor." I must have looked puzzled, so he told me that a Limbertwig was an old-fashioned apple.
It turns out that Mr. Morton spread not only the Gospel but some of the best-tasting apple varieties ever grown, many of them old lines or antique cultivars, rescued from the edge of extinction—varieties such as Moyer's Spice, Walker's Pippin, Sweet Bough, and Black Limbertwig. His 11- by 17-inch price list named some 150 varieties—including the Virginia Beauty ($5 for a five-foottree) and the Yellow Transparent ($5). Our meeting was the beginning of a friendship that would add some poetry to my rootball-toting life. For I would taste these mouthwatering apples at Morton's hillside nursery, and learn that the dark red, nearly black, Virginia Beauty is one of the best late keepers (apple parlance for a variety that ripens late and keeps well into the winter) you could ever sink your teeth into: sweet and juicy, with hints of cherry and almond. Yellow Transparent, also called June Apple, is almost white when fully ripe. Its light flesh cooks up in about five minutes and makes exquisite buttermilk biscuits. Once I'd sampled these old varieties, a Red Delicious or a Granny Smith never bore a second look.
Largely because of Morton, in 1992 my wife and I opened a small mail-order nursery that specializes in antique apple trees in general and old Southern apples in particular. We started buying stock wholesale from Morton and then reselling the trees. Not surprisingly, Virginia Beauty becameone of our biggest hits.
Along the way I discovered the sheer magnitude of America's long love affair with the apple. Today, only 15 popular varieties account for more than 90 percent of U.S.production. That wasn't always so. By 1930, Southerners alone had developed nearly 1,400 unique apple varieties, while more than 10,000 flourished nationwide. They came warts and all, some with rough, knobby skin, others as misshapen as a potato, and they ranged from the size of cherries to nearly as big as a grapefruit, with colors running the entire spectrum—flushed, striped, splashed and dottedin a wonderful array of impressionistic patterns.
Sadly, more than a thousand of these old Southern varieties are thought to be extinct. But Morton, who died a decade ago, and a handful of other hobbyists and independent nurserymen clung to the idea that many of these so-called extinct apple varieties might be living on, hidden from view in some obscure or overgrown orchard. Most of the apple trees planted in the past century, called old-timeor full-size, can live 75 years or longer, even under conditions of complete neglect. The apple sleuths questioned elderly gardeners, placed ads in periodicals and, in time, discovered that more than 300 Southern apple varieties were still flourishing. Today, with most pre-World War II orchards either gone or seriously in decline, time is running out to find other lost varieties.
When my grandfather, himself a retired nurseryman, learned of my interest in historical pomology, he handed me a manila envelope full of old fruit lithographs that had belonged to his father. "Dad sold fruit trees back in the '20s and '30s, he said. "These are from the plate book he used to carry."
When I spread the images out on my grandmother's pedestal kitchen table, it was as though my family tree were bringing forth fruit in its season. I marveled at the richly colored images of Maiden's Blush (waxen yellow with its cheek reddened toward the sun); Black Ben Davis (deep red, slightly conical, prized for its high-quality preserves); Johnson's Fine Winter (orangy red, queerly lopsided—yet deemed the "imperial of keepers"). I would learn as well that my grandfather's grandfather, C. C. Davis, started out in the nursery business back in 1876—and that virtually all of the more than 100 fruit varieties he propagated are now considered rare or extinct.
In the 19th century, fruit gardens were as common as vegetable or rose gardens are today. "Fine fruit is the flower of commodities," wrote Andrew Jackson Downing, author of the 1845 Fruits and Fruit Trees of America. "It is the most perfect union of the useful and the beautiful that the earth knows. Trees full of soft foliage; blossoms fresh with spring beauty; and, finally,—fruit, rich, bloom-dusted, melting, and luscious—such are the treasures of the orchard and garden, temptingly offered to every landholder in this bright and sunny, though temperate climate."
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Comments (8)
Hi,
I hope you can help. I've contacted everyone I could think of!
In Northern Wyoming in the Big Horn Basin, homesteaders around the early 1900's planted heirloom orchards. In 1979 record breaking storms killed all those orchards, including the one on my parent's farm.
In all my research, it seems the only thing I can find out is that there was a peddler who came through the area selling trees, and the varieties may have been unique with whatever nursery he provided from.
I have looked for 2 varieties from those orchards for decades with no luck at finding an apple that tasted like them. The transparent variety I'm afraid is just extinct with the death of our dear tree. However - one a crisp, sweet and tart perfectly combined, perfect and atypical taste for pies and cider may still be salvagable after all!
To my great delight I found an orchard with some of the one variety barely surviving and being torn out. Last fall with the owner's permission I pleaded for time until spring and posted signs on the trees.
The specialist who was going to help me save the variety is unable to go out now.
Do you know of anyone in the Northern Wyoming area who would be interested in saving this pioneer variety? The "bigger" areas nearby would be Cody, Wyoming or Billings, MT - the place is actually in Burlington, Wyoming.
In the West, things that date back to 100 years old are, well, pretty "old" in our view! In the east things date so much further back. This means the world to me, to save this variety. I don't know if this pioneer variety will be gone with this last orchard or not. I'd sure love to have some expert knowledge as I have no idea how to save them beyond my signs and notes on the trees!
Help?
Jessi
Posted by Jessi on March 6,2012 | 11:11 AM
What a wonderful article! I have e-mailed it to a cousin who has a farm in Mass.
I, myself, eat one, usually two, apples virtually every day of the year.
Posted by Mitchell Dormont on November 25,2011 | 10:25 PM
We bought 25 beautiful heirloom apple trees from the gentleman who wrote this article. He has a nursery in Bristol, VA and a web site at urbanhomestead@aol.com. We are delighted to have found his business and I have been fascinated by this article. What a wonderful way to preserve old apple varieties and remember those that make it possible. Many thanks!
Posted by Anne Small on February 17,2010 | 05:37 PM
Linda
Virginia Beauty and many other heirloom apples available from www.centuryfarmorchards.com
I ordered from them last year and was very please with the service and the trees.
Posted by George Krause on October 28,2009 | 09:52 PM
I am looking to buy the virgina beauty apples. If anyone knows where to find them please let me know. You can send me a e-mail at linlett@yahoo.com
THANKS FOR YOUR HELP
Posted by Linda Lett on September 13,2009 | 09:27 PM
I teach gardening to adults in the Bay Area of California, with a wide-range of interests. In season, I teach about apples, how to grow them and their history. Thank you for this article!!! -Deva Luna
Posted by Deva Luna on October 10,2008 | 12:30 AM
I was glad to see this article. Henry Morton was my great uncle! I was researching our family geneology when I came aross it. Your description of Uncle Henry brought back so many fond memories! He loved apples almost as much he loved serving the Lord! Thank you for the trip down memory lane!
Posted by Gina Mikles on September 27,2008 | 11:58 PM
I am glad to see this very interesting article posted on the internet. I am sending a friend the link in Holland to read and inspire him about the great old apples he found in his French farm's forest. I was truly impressed to remember this article after 6 years when he wrote to me about the tree he found in his forest which he thinks was once part of a French village orchard. Thanks, Frederick
Posted by Frederick Nunley on September 20,2008 | 01:31 PM