Neha Patil (Editor)

Taliaferro (apple)

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Species
  
Malus pumila

Rank
  
Cultivar

Higher classification
  
Apple

Taliaferro (apple) httpsimagesourassetscomfullcover2000x9786

Origin
  
Virginia, United States, pre-1778

Similar
  
Liveland Raspberry apple, Styre, Chelmsford Wonder, Upton Pyne apple, Jubilee apple

Taliaferro apple top 5 facts


The 'Taliaferro' (pr. "Tolliver"), 'Robinson' or 'Robertson' was a small-sized apple grown at Monticello by Thomas Jefferson. This cultivar appears to be extinct, though some horticulturalists assert that the 'Highland County' cultivar may be related, or even the same cultivar under a different name.

Jefferson called the variety "Taliaferro" in reference to a Major Taliaferro from whom he got his first samples of the fruit. Taliaferro himself claimed that the apples came from a farm owned by the Robertson or Robinson family, hence the other varietal names.

Jefferson stated the 'Taliaferro' apple was very juicy and good for eating. He praised it as the best cider apple he had tasted, producing a hard cider similar to wine or Champagne. In 1835, a gentleman named William Kenrick described the fruits as being small, only 1-2 inches in diameter, with white, red-streaked skin. Kenrick claimed the apples were unfit for eating, but reaffirmed their value in cidermaking.

References

Taliaferro (apple) Wikipedia