Cultivar 41: Mercer

Taxon ID:

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

Relationships: 1 | Linked Entities (visible): 1 | Evidence claims: 10 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=10 | sources=1 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: culinary_use:1, description_snippet:1, flavor_profile:1, fruit_color:1, fruit_size:1, selection_origin_reference:1, source_reference_abbreviation:1, taxon_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Mercer is a wild crabapple selection, described as a spontaneous hybrid. It has yellow, oblate fruit that is often more than 6 cm across and can reach about 2 5/8 inches and 3 ounces. The fruit is acid and acerb, not dessert quality. Sources consistently describe it as a jelly and sauce apple valued for the quince-like flavor it can add to applesauce. [S2] [S3]

Sources trace Mercer to a wild tree found near Sherrard in Mercer County, Illinois, by N. K. Fluke of Davenport, Iowa, around the 1890s. One prairie reference shortens this to "Fluke c.1892." [S2] [S3] In N. E. Hansen's 1927 bulletin, Mercer appears among native wild crab seedlings with Giant and Missouri. It is presented as material found growing wild, not as a deliberate breeding cross. Hansen also noted that at that stage such wild crab selections were valued more as ornamental lawn trees than as fruit sorts. [S3]

The fruit is yellow, oblate, and sharply acid. [S3] Prairie Canada sources say it is often over 6 cm in diameter, while Hansen gave a maximum size of 2 5/8 inches and a weight of about 3 ounces. [S2] [S3] The flavor is described as acid and acerb. Its main use was in jelly or to add a quince-like note to applesauce, not for fresh eating. [S2] [S3]

Tree notes are sparse but distinctive. Hansen wrote that Mercer was especially productive at the South Dakota station when top grafted onto Hibernal apple. He also said the tree is beautiful in bloom. [S3] This suggests Mercer had value both as a hardy ornamental crab and as a useful processing fruit.

No source in this set gives a formal hardiness zone. The evidence is indirect. Mercer was preserved in Hansen's northern plains introduction work, classed with native wild crab material, and reported productive in South Dakota station trials when worked on Hibernal. [S3] This places it in a prairie hardy context, but the packet does not support a tighter zone claim.

Mercer also appears later in lineage records as a parent of Sweet Russet Crab. This matters as evidence that it was not only collected but also used in later breeding. The packet does not provide the other parent for that cross, so Mercer should be treated here as a wild crabapple selection with later breeding use, not as a fully resolved pedigree case. [S3]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Plant Introductions, with 2 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“Attributed to Fluke, circa 1892.”
[1]
“Found growing wild.”
[3]
“Indexed at Bulletin 224, page 14.”
[2]
“Index entry listed on page 14.”
[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
3Edible Apples in Prairie Canadaunknown1000p47Listed as a standard apple (standard apple, fruit 5 cm diameter or more).; Reference note cites CGS, expanded from the legend as Country Guide Survey, with Morden noted in parentheses.; Found growing near Sherrard, Merce

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
3p47description_snippetListed as a standard apple (standard apple, fruit 5 cm diameter or more).Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47source_reference_abbreviationReference note cites CGS, expanded from the legend as Country Guide Survey, with Morden noted in parentheses.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47entry_locationFound growing near Sherrard, Mercer County, Illinois.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47culinary_useUsed for jelly or for adding a quince-like flavor to apple sauce.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47flavor_profileAcid.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47fruit_colorYellow fruit.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47fruit_sizeFruit often over 6 cm.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47taxon_contextClassified as ST, expanded from the legend as a standard apple with fruit 5 cm diameter or more.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47selection_origin_referenceAssociated with Fluke, circa 1892.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90
3p47entry_pedigreeSpontaneous hybrid.Mercer (spont. hybrid) Fluke (c.1892) STpage_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
No catalog issue offerings linked.

Linked Entities

RelationTypeIDLabel
cross_parentcultivar42Sweet Russet Crab

Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
description_snippetListed as a standard apple (standard apple, fruit 5 cm diameter or more).0.96
source_reference_abbreviationReference note cites CGS, expanded from the legend as Country Guide Survey, with Morden noted in parentheses.0.90
entry_locationFound growing near Sherrard, Mercer County, Illinois.0.97
culinary_useUsed for jelly or for adding a quince-like flavor to apple sauce.0.97
flavor_profileAcid.0.94
fruit_colorYellow fruit.0.96
fruit_sizeFruit often over 6 cm.0.95
taxon_contextClassified as ST, expanded from the legend as a standard apple with fruit 5 cm diameter or more.0.98
selection_origin_referenceAssociated with Fluke, circa 1892.0.90
entry_pedigreeSpontaneous hybrid.0.97

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
No history events.