Cultivar 451: Rockford

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: 16 | History events: 0 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=16 | sources=1 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: description_snippet:6, productivity:2, recommendation_context:2, flavor_profile:1, fruit_size:1, selection_origin_reference:1, taxon_context:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Rockford is an Americana plum, described as a wild northern Iowa variety introduced by Charles G. Patten of Charles City, Iowa. [S2] [S3] South Dakota trial reports describe it as a productive prairie plum of high eating quality. It was especially remembered for its heavy blue bloom and for fruit said to come nearer a true blue plum than any other Americana. [S2] It was also counted among the station's choice native varieties for hardy planting on native plum roots. [S3]

South Dakota station records place Rockford in the old Station orchard planted in 1888, where it proved a very heavy and constant bearer. [S2] [S3] A later station orchard summary at Brookings again reported a very large crop and excellent quality, though the fruit was said to be smaller than Wolf or De Soto. [S3] A. Norby at Madison also recommended it as one of the very best medium early varieties. [S3] Not every observer agreed. H. C. Warner called it inferior, showing that its reputation was not uniform across growers. [S2]

The fruit was repeatedly described as rather small or undersized, especially when the tree overbore. [S2] [S3] Sources describe it as dark red under a heavy bluish bloom, with fine or excellent quality and a relatively large pit for the size of the plum. [S2] Norby reported that the fruit hung well on the tree and was free from pockets. [S2] [S3] Its season is placed at about August 28 to September 1, which fits its reputation as a medium early plum. [S2] [S3] One bulletin also states plainly that the fruit was too small for market. [S2]

The tree was described as hardy, but also as excessively productive and inclined to overbear, which helps explain the frequent complaints about small fruit. [S2] In Manitoba correspondence, it was listed among cultivars occasionally killed back from the top when one or two years old, so its hardiness had limits in colder northern exposure. [S2] Disease notes are mixed but specific. Norby called it very free from plum pocket, while another South Dakota description said rust or scab was confined to this variety and disfigured the fruit. Norby also noted it as the only scabby plum in his list, though the defect showed little when ripe. [S2] [S3]

Rockford belongs to the late nineteenth century group of hardy native and Americana plums that South Dakota growers were testing for long lived, fruitful orchard use on native plum roots. [S2] [S3] It was named alongside cultivars such as Wyant, De Soto, Wolf, Rollingstone, Stoddard, Hawkeye, and Forest Garden in this northern plum context. [S1] [S3] It also appears in a 1902 photographic plate of named plums, showing that it remained part of the station's documented cultivar set after its earlier orchard reports. [S2]

Rockford also appears in discussion of plum topworking on sand cherry stock, but that evidence concerns scions and stock performance rather than the cultivar's own origin or parentage. [S1] No direct parentage is given in the cited sources.

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Plums in South Dakota, with 2 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“Awild variety introduced by Charles G. Patten of Charles City, Iowa.”
[1]
“The trees in that adverse note were later said to have been not on Sand Cherry roots at all, but misobserved.”
[2]
“Fruit distinguished by the heavy blue bloom and excellent quality.”
[1]
“The adverse note stated that some of the trees fruited in 1897 and all of them fruited in 1898.”
[2]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

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Story Highlights

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Related cultivars mentioned in source context

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Cold Hardiness

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

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Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
17Plums in South Dakotaunknown1600p34Fruit is too small for market.; Ripens about September 1st.; This comes nearer being a blue plum than any other Americana.; In quality it ranks high.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
17p34recommendation_contextFruit is too small for market.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34description_snippetRipens about September 1st.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34description_snippetThis comes nearer being a blue plum than any other Americana.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34flavor_profileIn quality it ranks high.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34description_snippetPit large for size of plum.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34description_snippetRust or scab confined to this variety disfigures the fruit.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34productivityA. Norby described it as excessively productive and inclined to overbear.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34entry_hardiness_observationA. Norby described the tree as hardy.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34description_snippetA. Norby reported a large crop, ripe August 28th; fruit rather small, dark red with bluish bloom, of fine quality; free from pockets, and hanging well to the tree.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34recommendation_contextH. C. Warner of Forestburg, South Dakota, wrote: this variety is inferior.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34description_snippetFruit distinguished by the heavy blue bloom and excellent quality.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34fruit_sizeThe fruit runs undersized, and under overbearing is generally too small.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34productivityIt is described as a very heavy, constant bearer, so much so that the fruit runs undersized.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34entry_locationIn the old Station orchard, planted in 1888, this variety proved itself a very heavy, constant bearer.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34selection_origin_referenceAwild variety introduced by Charles G. Patten of Charles City, Iowa.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34taxon_contextRockford is presented as an Americana plum.Rockford, Americana.page_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
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Linked Entities

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Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
recommendation_contextFruit is too small for market.0.90
description_snippetRipens about September 1st.0.91
description_snippetThis comes nearer being a blue plum than any other Americana.0.91
flavor_profileIn quality it ranks high.0.94
description_snippetPit large for size of plum.0.93
description_snippetRust or scab confined to this variety disfigures the fruit.0.90
productivityA. Norby described it as excessively productive and inclined to overbear.0.94
entry_hardiness_observationA. Norby described the tree as hardy.0.92
description_snippetA. Norby reported a large crop, ripe August 28th; fruit rather small, dark red with bluish bloom, of fine quality; free from pockets, and hanging well to the tree.0.93
recommendation_contextH. C. Warner of Forestburg, South Dakota, wrote: this variety is inferior.0.86
description_snippetFruit distinguished by the heavy blue bloom and excellent quality.0.96
fruit_sizeThe fruit runs undersized, and under overbearing is generally too small.0.97
productivityIt is described as a very heavy, constant bearer, so much so that the fruit runs undersized.0.97
entry_locationIn the old Station orchard, planted in 1888, this variety proved itself a very heavy, constant bearer.0.95
selection_origin_referenceA wild variety introduced by Charles G. Patten of Charles City, Iowa.0.98
taxon_contextRockford is presented as an Americana plum.0.99

History Events

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No history events.