Historical background information for varieties handed down from bygone days.
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July 21, 2010 | #1 |
Tomatoville® Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Hendersonville, NC zone 7
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And for comparison, here are the Isbell Seeds 1921 tomato listings
There were many seed companies in the US in the 1880-1940 period, but for the most part, only a few seemed really active in tomato breeding. Burpee, Livingston, Maule, Salzer, Henderson, Buckbee, and Isbell seemed to be the leaders in creating new varieties - many of the others had a few specialties but mostly carried the mainstay varieties of the time.
So, for comparison to the Burpee listings, here is what Isbell was selling in 1921. Red tomatoes: (18 listings) Earlibell (one of their developments) Earliana Bonny Best Chalk's Early Jewel John Baer Enormous Michigan Red Wonder (their development) Red Peach Stone Matchless Red Rock Crimson Cushion Dwarf Stone The Comet Red Currant Red Cherry Red Pear Red Plum Pink tomatoes: (12 types) Livingston's Globe Improved Dwarf Champion Acme Colossal (their own development) Alpha Pink (their own) June Pink Early Detroit Improved Ponderosa McGee (confused about this one - says "it is a hybrid producing red and pink fruit" - whatever that means!) (their own, I think) New Big Dwarf (their own) Beauty Plentiful (listed as a potato leaf) (their own, I think) Yellow or Gold tomatoes: (5 types) Golden Colossal (their own) Golden Queen Yellow Cherry Yellow Pear Yellow Plum Missed one! White tomato (1 type) Albino or White Beauty (exactly as they listed it, very limited quantity!) So, 36 different tomatoes, of which 9 seem to have been developed by them.
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Craig |
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