Cultivar 452: Rollingstone

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

Open profile JSON | Open lineage explorer | Open lineage JSON

Evidence Badge: emerging | claims=13 | sources=2 | contradictions=0

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

Connected Views: lineage table | lineage graph | history charts | trait matrix | search

Link Filter: showing all links (including candidate); hidden candidate links=0. Hide candidate links

Wiki Draft

Rollingstone is an Americana plum found on the banks of Rollingstone Creek in Winona County, southeastern Minnesota, by O. M. Lord of Minnesota City. He introduced it about 1882.[S2] South Dakota sources describe it as a hardy northern native plum, valued less for novelty than for steady orchard performance where many tender sorts failed.[S2][S3]

Station records from Brookings and the old South Dakota Station orchard describe Rollingstone as very hardy, productive, and able to bear very large crops.[S2][S3] Sources repeatedly praise the fruit quality. They call it excellent, but also note that the fruit tends to be small in heavy crop years and is smaller than DeSoto.[S2][S3] Plates of the 1902 and 1904 crops show it among the named native plums under comparison and preserve a visual record of the fruit from that period.[S2]

Rollingstone also appears as a practical orchard plum in regional recommendation lists. South Dakota writers included it among their choice native varieties. One source says that when such plums are budded or grafted on hardy northern native plum stock, they make long lived, hardy, fruitful trees.[S3] A 1904 Minnesota State Horticultural Society list also recommended Rollingstone for general cultivation in Minnesota.[S2]

The record on tree habit is mixed because some observations describe the cultivar on different root systems. On Sand Cherry stock in southeastern Minnesota, Rollingstone was reported to grow very well and seemed likely to make a good crop before it had borne.[S1] In a South Dakota trial on Sand Cherry roots, however, the trees were all alive but had not sprouted or grown as strongly as plums on their own roots.[S1] These reports make Rollingstone useful not only as a cultivar, but also as part of the early prairie experiment with dwarfing and alternative plum stocks.[S1]

Its hardiness is the clearest point in the record. South Dakota orchard reports call it very hardy. Another grower says it is hardy and will grow in any location. Manitoba correspondence places it among the named plums being tested in a colder northern setting.[S2][S3] The Manitoba note is less clear about its exact winter performance there, but the broader evidence places Rollingstone firmly in the hardy Upper Midwest and prairie plum tradition.[S2]

Rollingstone is presented here as a Minnesota native Americana plum, not as a bred cross with documented parentage.[S2] No direct parentage is given in the sources used here. What remains is a clear picture of a local plum that took its name from place, entered cultivation early, and stayed worth recommending because it combined hardiness, productivity, and good fruit quality.[S2][S3]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Plums in South Dakota, with 3 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“Found on the banks of Rollingstone Creek, Winona county, southeastern Minnesota, by O. M. Lord of Minnesota City, and introduced by him about 1882.”
[1]
“Mr. Stobbs reported that the plums on Sand Cherry roots were all living.”
[3]
“It has proven very hardy.”
[1]
“The fruit is of excellent quality.”
[1]

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
17Plums in South Dakotaunknown700p34The fruit is of excellent quality.; The fruit runs small under heavy bearing.; It has proven productive.; It has proven very hardy.
112Pollination Studies with Stone Fruitsunknown600p3 p4Species/background listed as P. americana.; Bloom season: late.; Pollinated 12 varieties tested.; Rated as a good pollinizer in Table 3.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
112p4taxon_contextSpecies/background listed as P. americana.Rollingstone 12 Late P. americanapage_block:0.90
112p4description_snippetBloom season: late.Rollingstone 12 Late P. americanapage_block:0.90
112p4description_snippetPollinated 12 varieties tested.Rollingstone 12 Late P. americanapage_block:0.90
112p4recommendation_contextRated as a good pollinizer in Table 3.Rollingstone 12 Late P. americanapage_block:0.90
112p3recommendation_contextNative varieties proved to be good pollinizers for hybrid plums that bloomed at the same time.Rollingstone — P. americanapage_block:0.90
112p3entry_pedigreeListed in Table 2 as P. americana.Rollingstone — P. americanapage_block:0.90
17p34flavor_profileThe fruit is of excellent quality.Rollingstone, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34fruit_sizeThe fruit runs small under heavy bearing.Rollingstone, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34productivityIt has proven productive.Rollingstone, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34entry_hardiness_observationIt has proven very hardy.Rollingstone, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34entry_locationIn the old Station orchard, planted in 1888, Rollingstone has proven very hardy and productive.Rollingstone, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34selection_origin_referenceFound on the banks of Rollingstone Creek, Winona county, southeastern Minnesota, by O. M. Lord of Minnesota City, and introduced by him about 1882.Rollingstone, Americana.page_block:0.90
17p34taxon_contextRollingstone is presented as an Americana plum.Rollingstone, Americana.page_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
taxon_contextSpecies/background listed as P. americana.0.98
description_snippetBloom season: late.0.96
description_snippetPollinated 12 varieties tested.0.96
recommendation_contextRated as a good pollinizer in Table 3.0.98
recommendation_contextNative varieties proved to be good pollinizers for hybrid plums that bloomed at the same time.0.91
entry_pedigreeListed in Table 2 as P. americana.0.98
flavor_profileThe fruit is of excellent quality.0.94
fruit_sizeThe fruit runs small under heavy bearing.0.95
productivityIt has proven productive.0.94
entry_hardiness_observationIt has proven very hardy.0.96
entry_locationIn the old Station orchard, planted in 1888, Rollingstone has proven very hardy and productive.0.96
selection_origin_referenceFound on the banks of Rollingstone Creek, Winona county, southeastern Minnesota, by O. M. Lord of Minnesota City, and introduced by him about 1882.0.97
taxon_contextRollingstone is presented as an Americana plum.0.99

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
No history events.