Great Moments in Apple History by Mitch Lynd
8,000 B.C.—Nomadic hunter/gatherer societies invent agriculture and
begin to "settle" in places throughout the "fertile crescent" from the Nile
through the Tigris and Euphrates, the Indus, and Yellow River Valleys. As both
trade and military expeditions begin among these earliest civilizations,
dessert apples quickly spread from the forests of their origin in the
Tien Shan mountains of eastern Kazakstan throughout the "civilized"
world. Each settlement seeks to embellish their "paradise" or pleasure
grounds with the most tempting apples of the forests. Previously isolated gene
pools from some of the 25 distinctly different species of apples found
throughout the world are now brought in contact with each other and gene
transfer among apple species occurs. Agriculturalists are charmed.
Naturalists are alarmed.
6,500 B.C.—Remains of apples are found among excavations at Jericho in
the Jordan Valley and dated to this time period.
5,000 B.C.—Feng Li, a Chinese diplomat, gives up his position when he
becomes consumed by grafting peaches, almonds, persimmons, pears and
apples as a commercial venture according to "The Precious Book of Enrichment",
part I, chapt. 4. Agriculturalists are charmed. Naturalists are alarmed.
2500 B.C.—Dried apple slices are found on saucers in the tomb of Queen
Pu-Abi at Ur near Basara, in Southern Iran, linking royalty to the irresistible
seduction of apples.
1500 B.C.—A tablet found in northern Mesopotamia records the
sale of an apple orchard by Tupkitilla, an Assyrian from Nuzi, for the
significant sum of 3 prized breeder sheep. Hittite Law Codes specify a three
shekel penalty for anyone allowing a fire to destroy an apple orchard.
800 B.C.—Homer's Odyssey recounts the memory of his fruit orchard to
his aging father:
"12 pear trees bowing with their pendant load, and ten, that
red with blushing apples glow'd". . .
and later tells about how King Tantalus was "tantalized" by the
unreachable "fruit over his head: pears, pomegranates, sweet figs, apples and
juicy olives".
401 B.C.—Greek historian and essayist, Xenophon is so inspired by
walled fruit gardens throughout the Persian empire that he establishes one on
his own estate in Greece. He then proceeds to coin a new Greek word from the
Persian pairidaeza, or walled garden, later becoming the Latin
paradisus, and finally the English paradise.
323 B.C.—Theophrastos describes 6 varieties of apples and discusses
why budding, grafting, and general tree care are required for optimum production
and says seeds almost always produce trees of inferior quality fruit.
Agriculturalists are charmed, naturalists are alarmed.
200 B.C.—Latin emerges from a localized dialect in Central Italy to a
full and precise language still used in biology, law, medicine, and religion.
The Latin "Fruor" meaning "I delight in" is the source of our word
"fruit".
100 B.C.—Roman poet Horace notes that Italy has nearly become one big
fruit orchard and the perfect meal begins with eggs and ends with apples. Apples
moved west with the rise of the Roman empire as the Romans adopted the apples
and orchard skills of the Greeks and Persians before them. They proceeded to
carry apples to the far reaches of the Roman Empire including continental Europe
and the British Isles where previously only crab apples were known. They
even created a deity of the fruit trees, the goddess Pomona. Like the Persians
and the Greeks, the Romans and many cultures since have responded to the basic
human longing for a time and place where men and women are free from the battle
with nature for food and shelter. This place is normally symbolized by a garden
of paradise and pleasure complete with fruit laden trees featuring apples.
50 B.C.—Cicero, author, statesman, and philosopher urges his Roman
countrymen to save their apple seeds from dessert to develop new cultivars.
Agricultuaralists and naturalists concur.
50 A.D.—J.M. Columella, a Spaniard living in Rome, an early fruit
tester and stickler for quality noted that each fruit seedling was a new and
unique cultivar "none to be kept for a long time unless approved by experiment",
an otherwise post-Linnean conclusion. To illustrate his point he adapted a verse
from Virgil:
It serves no end their* numbers to describe, The man that's
fond of this laborious task, With equal ease, may learn how many sands, By
western winds are tossed in Libyan plains. (*i.e. seedling cultivars)
79 A.D.—Pliny the Elder in his Natural History describes 20
varieties of apples.
200 A.D.—Famous Greek physicians living in Rome, Galen and later
Hippocrates, recommend sweet apples with meals as aids to digestion and
sour apples only for fainting and constipation.
400 A.D.—Saint Jerome, founder of Monasticism, tells his monks to
spend more time grafting and budding fruit trees "to escape sloth and the
devil".
650 A.D.—The Koran, codified by Caliph Utman hails fruit as a
sublime gift of God.
900 A.D.—A sacred Shiite drama is written by a secret society of
Moslem purists featuring the death of Mohammed in which he inhales eternal life
by inhaling the scent of an apple an angel had brought him. Curiously, many
centuries earlier, Aristoteles was said to have kept death away by holding an
apple and inhaling its life sustaining fragrance. Finally and consciously he
drops the apple thus releasing his soul.
1100 A.D.—The Medical School of Salerno teaches the therapeutic value
of apples with regard to disturbances of the bowels, lungs and nervous
systems.
1240 A.D.—Albertus Magnus of Cologne, bishop, naturalist, and
influential philosopher, agonizes in his De Vegetabilibus over whether a fruit
tree has a soul. Albertus' then novel philosophy is that the only way to advance
knowledge of nature is by searching for nature's hidden principles rather than
by relying on the writings of others, however venerable. Discarding the
scholastic concept of fruit as a ready-made product of creation, Albertus held
that cultivars developed from wild forms, centuries before Darwin draws similar
conclusions about the origin of species.
1470 A.D.—The Fall of Man, a painting by the popular and highly
respected Hugo Van Der Goes, in clear detail of both leaves and fruit, depicts
an apple tree in the biblical Garden of Eden complete with Adam and Eve and the
Devil. Thereafter artists everywhere choose apples for the Garden of Eden, even
though the apples were no doubt borrowed from a similar creation story in Greek
mythology, causing apple demand among illiterate Christians to plummet. Among
learned Christians, e.g. in the monasteries and royal courts, apples continued
to flourish.
1618 A.D.—William Lawson of Yorkshire, writes A New Orchard and
Garden, the first book in the English language about the practical aspects
of apple growing. He is more often quoted on his sensual observations. "All
delight in orchards". "For whereas every other pleasure fills some one of our
senses, and that only with delight, this makes all senses swim in pleasure".
"What can your eyes desire to see, your ears to hear, your mouth to taste, your
nose to smell that is not to be had in an orchard, with abundance of variety."
Two mottos appear on the title page; "Skill and paines bring fruitful gaines"
and "No man is an island". Lawson who believed orcharding offered the best of
business and pleasure had a profound influence on the Lynd family of Yorkshire.
1665 A.D.—Sir Isaac Newton watches an apple fall to the ground and,
wondering why it fell in a straight line, is inspired to discover the laws of
gravitation and motion.
1751 A.D.—Carl Von Linne, founder of organized Botany, revealed his
contempt for horticulture when he said "All our fruit trees are a result of
Man's interference and, therefore, unworthy of the attention of even the
lowliest botanist". Agriculturalists groaned. Naturalists applauded.
1790 A.D.—Thomas Andrew Knight of England begins the first
controlled apple hybridization program for apple improvement.
Agriculturalists are charmed and naturalists are alarmed.
1904 A.D.—"An apple a day keeps the doctor away", proclaimed J.T.
Stinson in an address to the St. Louis Expositon.
1929 A.D.—Edward Bunyard, author of "The Anatomy of Dessert", comments
on apples and the 6th sense "the crunch is the thing, a
certain joy in crashing through living tissue, a memory of Neanderthal
days".
1945 A.D.—An apple breeding program is initiated jointly at
Purdue and the University of Illinois using F2-26829-2-2 the largest
and highest quality apple known at the time to have resistance to the big three
diseases of apples, fireblight, scab and powdery mildew. It came from a
brilliant, out of the box, cross made by Dr. C. S. Crandall at the Univ. of Ill.
earlier in the 1900s who crossed Rome with Malus floribunda 821, a pea
sized crab apple that was highly resistant to all the major diseases of
apple.
1988 A.D.—The great Alar hoax is perpetrated on the public as a scare
tactic for fund raising by the Natural Resources Defense Council. Apple demand
falls to zero as the media rushes to report one sensationalized story after
another about harmless, nearly non existent chemical residues on apples.
Perception overrides reality and the U.S. apple industry goes into a steep
economic decline. It is the year of peak apple production for Lynd Fruit Farm
Inc. at 240,000 bushels. The consequential losses were enormous.
1989 A.D.—Researchers at Cornell University used a "gene gun"
to successfully transfer an anti-bacterial gene from a Cecropia moth to a
fireblight susceptible apple tree. This gene transfer from an animal to a plant
enabled the tree to develop its own fireblight resistance and trees made from
buds or graft wood from this tree also had blight resistance. Bio-tech as
demonstrated could save the apple industry and consumers millions of dollars.
Agricultualists are charmed. Naturalists are alarmed.
1993 A.D.—The world's first large scale commercial planting of
naturally disease resistant apples is planted at Lynd Fruit Farm, on
Morse Rd., Pataskala, Ohio. The trees then known as HER4T16 are later elevated
to "Co-op 38" and finally named Goldrush. It is the first large scale
application of the breeding program begun early in this century at the
University of Ill. Agriculturalists and naturalists applaud.
1995 A.D.—Mitch Lynd named Apple Grower of the Year by the American
Fruit Grower Magazine and the U.S. Apple Association from over 9,000 apple
growers in the U.S and Canada.
1998 A.D.—Mitch Lynd and co-founder Ed Fackler start the Mid West
Apple Improvement Association, a group dedicated to breeding disease resistant
late bloomers to naturally escape fire blight, scab, powdery mildew, cedar apple
rust and late spring freezes thus reducing the use of fungicides, antibiotics,
and orchard heating. Agriculturalists and naturalists applaud and chemical
companies cringe. Land grant colleges of agriculture are in a bind because
increasingly their funding comes from pesticide manufacturers instead of the
people through taxation and charitable giving.
2000 A.D.—Researchers at the University of California discover
powerful new anti-oxidants in apples. |