Cultivar 455: Dewolf Seedling

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

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Claim Types: description_snippet:3, anecdote_snippet:1, flavor_profile:1, fruit_color:1, fruit_size:1, recommendation_context:1, selection_origin_reference:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Dewolf Seedling is a South Dakota seedling plum remembered for unusually large, handsome fruit and very good dessert quality.[S1] It was not a named breeding program release in the modern sense. J. DeWolf of Letcher, South Dakota, wrote in a letter dated September 7, 1904 that he had received tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney of Yankton in 1901.[S1]

Its origin goes back to pits saved from the plum orchard of H. J. Gurney at Elk Point, South Dakota. The bulletin describes that orchard as about fourteen acres and the largest plum orchard in the state.[S1] The seedling was part of a local search for superior hardy plums. C. W. Gurney offered a $100 premium for fruit from these seedlings that could match DeSoto in flavor or Hawkeye and Quaker in size and beauty.[S1] The source does not identify the exact parent cross. It only gives this orchard seedling origin.[S1]

The fruit was described from ten samples as very large, about one and one half by one and three eighths inches. It had a regular roundish to nearly oval form, a flat apex, a very shallow cavity, a glossy surface, and attractive dark red skin slightly marbled with dark yellow on the shaded side.[S1] It had some blue bloom and many large, conspicuous dots, and some specimens were an even darker red.[S1] The skin was rather thin and free from astringency. The flesh was dark yellow and tender. The flavor was sweet and juicy, with quality rated very good.[S1] The pit was free, roundish oval, and somewhat flattened.[S1]

The bulletin gives no clear season, storage, tree habit, or disease notes for Dewolf Seedling.[S1] It also does not state a hardiness zone directly, though its selection and description in South Dakota place it in the context of upper Great Plains plum growing.[S1] Dewolf Seedling matters less as a fully documented commercial cultivar than as evidence of how many promising plums were raised from orchard seedlings on the northern plains and judged against standards such as DeSoto, Hawkeye, and Quaker.[S1]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Plums in South Dakota.

Featured source descriptions

“J. DeWolf of Letcher, South Dakota, reported in a letter dated September 7, 1904 that he had received tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney of Yankton in 1901.”
[1]
“Form regular, roundish approaching oval; apex flat; cavity wide and very shallow; suture a line; surface somewhat glossy.”
[1]
“In some specimens the red color became very dark, and the dots varied considerably in size.”
[1]
“Skin rather thin and free from astringency; flesh dark yellow and tender; flavor sweet and juicy; quality very good.”
[1]

Parentage

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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 Dakotaunknown1000p37Pit free, roundish-oval, and somewhat flattened.; Skin rather thin and free from astringency; flesh dark yellow and tender; flavor sweet and juicy; quality very good.; In some specimens the red color became very dark, an

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
17p37description_snippetPit free, roundish-oval, and somewhat flattened.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37flavor_profileSkin rather thin and free from astringency; flesh dark yellow and tender; flavor sweet and juicy; quality very good.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37description_snippetIn some specimens the red color became very dark, and the dots varied considerably in size.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37fruit_colorColor was an attractive dark red, slightly marbled on the shady side with dark yellow, with some blue bloom and many large conspicuous dots.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37description_snippetForm regular, roundish approaching oval; apex flat; cavity wide and very shallow; suture a line; surface somewhat glossy.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37fruit_sizeFruit described from ten samples was very large, about one and one-half by one and three-eighths inches.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37recommendation_contextC. W. Gurney offered a $100 premium for plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or to Hawkeye and Quaker in size and beauty.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37anecdote_snippetThe parent orchard was described as the largest plum orchard in the state, containing about fourteen acres.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37entry_locationThe seedlings were grown from pits saved in the plum orchard of H. J. Gurney at Elk Point, South Dakota.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90
17p37selection_origin_referenceJ. DeWolf of Letcher, South Dakota, reported in a letter dated September 7, 1904 that he had received tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney of Yankton in 1901.J. DeWolf... received a lot of tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney... one raising plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or in size and beauty to Hawkeye and Quaker.page_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

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Linked Entities

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Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
description_snippetPit free, roundish-oval, and somewhat flattened.0.90
flavor_profileSkin rather thin and free from astringency; flesh dark yellow and tender; flavor sweet and juicy; quality very good.0.93
description_snippetIn some specimens the red color became very dark, and the dots varied considerably in size.0.86
fruit_colorColor was an attractive dark red, slightly marbled on the shady side with dark yellow, with some blue bloom and many large conspicuous dots.0.92
description_snippetForm regular, roundish approaching oval; apex flat; cavity wide and very shallow; suture a line; surface somewhat glossy.0.89
fruit_sizeFruit described from ten samples was very large, about one and one-half by one and three-eighths inches.0.91
recommendation_contextC. W. Gurney offered a $100 premium for plums from these seedlings equal to DeSoto in flavor or to Hawkeye and Quaker in size and beauty.0.90
anecdote_snippetThe parent orchard was described as the largest plum orchard in the state, containing about fourteen acres.0.92
entry_locationThe seedlings were grown from pits saved in the plum orchard of H. J. Gurney at Elk Point, South Dakota.0.94
selection_origin_referenceJ. DeWolf of Letcher, South Dakota, reported in a letter dated September 7, 1904 that he had received tame seedling plums from C. W. Gurney of Yankton in 1901.0.94

History Events

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