Cultivar 294: Snyder

Taxon ID:

Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=no

Relationships: 0 | Linked Entities (visible): 0 | Evidence claims: 3 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=3 | sources=2 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: caption_context:1, recommendation_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Snyder is a blackberry cultivar best remembered as a widely planted commercial variety in the late 19th and early 20th century. A South Dakota bulletin calls it "the most popular of all blackberries for commercial purposes" and says it began as a chance seedling on or near the farm of Henry Snyder near La Porte, Indiana, about 1861. [S2]

Its documented origin is simple and clear. Snyder was not presented as a formal breeding station introduction. It was a seedling selection that spread because growers valued it enough to make it standard stock. Later northern nursery material shows the name was still well known enough to appear in a photo caption in a 1950 Daniels Nursery planting guide. [S2] [S3]

The surviving sources here say little about berry size, color, flavor, season, or processing quality. They do preserve its reputation and its hardiness limits. At the South Dakota Station at Brookings it was judged "not sufficiently hardy," which sets a clear limit on its use in exposed prairie conditions. [S2]

Even so, Snyder was not dismissed everywhere in the region. In the Black Hills discussion it is named, with Ancient Briton, as a good blackberry variety for growers who still wanted to try blackberries where they usually performed poorly at that altitude. [S1] [S2] A separate district recommendation list also includes Snyder for District No. 7, but only with winter protection. [S1]

In the archive, Snyder stands less as a fully described fruit than as a marker of blackberry culture pushing north and west beyond its comfort zone. The sources agree that it was important enough to be a commercial standard, yet marginal enough in South Dakota that success depended on site and protection. Its story is that of a famous eastern or Midwestern blackberry meeting prairie winters. [S1] [S2]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Raspberries, Blackberries and Dewberries, with 1 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“Originated as a chance seedling on or near the farm of Henry Snyder, near La Porte, Indiana, about 1861.”
[3]
“Not sufficiently hardy at this Station.”
[3]
“Snyder is named as a good blackberry variety for growers who still wish to grow blackberries despite poor performance at this altitude.”
[3]
“The most popular of all blackberries for commercial purposes.”
[3]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

Lineage Links

Derived or downstream cultivar links

Story Highlights

Source-story quotations

Family Navigation

Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.

Related cultivars mentioned in source context

No sibling cultivars surfaced from source quotes yet.

Cold Hardiness

Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.

Zone MinZone MaxZone TextAssertion TypeOutcomeLocationConfidence
No explicit zone assertion rows yet.

Media Gallery

No linked media assets.

Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
14A Study of Northwestern Applesunknown200p19Assigned to District No. 7.; Snyder is listed under blackberries with a district-specific recommendation and winter-protection context.
106Daniels planting guide, 1950unknown100p26The name Snyder appears as the caption beneath a berry photograph on this page.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
14p19entry_locationAssigned to District No. 7.BLACK BERRIES. District No. 7 - With winter protection - Snyder.page_block:0.90
14p19recommendation_contextSnyder is listed under blackberries with a district-specific recommendation and winter-protection context.BLACK BERRIES. District No. 7 - With winter protection - Snyder.page_block:0.90
106p26caption_contextThe name Snyder appears as the caption beneath a berry photograph on this page.SNYDERpage_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
No catalog issue offerings linked.

Linked Entities

RelationTypeIDLabel
No linked entities at this filter level.

Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
entry_locationAssigned to District No. 7.0.95
recommendation_contextSnyder is listed under blackberries with a district-specific recommendation and winter-protection context.0.95
caption_contextThe name Snyder appears as the caption beneath a berry photograph on this page.0.95

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
No history events.