Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Rock's Nurseries after 1884

1887 San Jose Directory
There seems to be the general assumption that Rock's Nurseries was consolidated into the California Nursery right away in 1884. 

But it makes no sense that you would uproot all of your nursery stock in San Jose and move it to Niles. Wouldn't it make more sense to keep both properties and sell the Rock's Nurseries stock from both catalogs until there was no more? I have followed this transition for a while. There was a messy divorce in the midst of all of this and probably some issues with this break-up.
Lots of information can be gleaned from the San Jose Directories.

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Lucy Shinn Smile

Lucy Ellen Shinn was just a black and white photo on the wall at Shinn House. We never never knew much about her and what kind of person she was.

She and her husband, James, raised five talented children, three who survived beyond into adulthood. Their childhoods spanned from the 1850s to 1880s during the time when Shinn's Nurseries was underway.

In 2020 we were fortunate to learn about Lucy from letters that she wrote to her daughter Millie. Kathryn Kasch, descendant of Lucy's oldest son, Charles Howard Shinn, spent many hours of her pandemic days transcribing 120 of Lucy's letters. The letters cover the span from 1873 to 1882. During this time, Millie was in grade school and then later in college, one of the first women admitted to the new University of California.  Millie later was the first woman to receive a PhD from UC Berkeley.

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

The 'Wickson Challenge' ... lost out

'Wickson Challenge' Plum
 This painting has a very faint writing on it - 'Wickson Challenge.' 

If you look that name up you find that 'Wickson Challenge' was renamed 'Formosa' and is a Burbank variety. So is this variety still around? And can you buy it?

The plum was front page news in the January 17, 1907 Pacific Rural Press and California Fruit Bulletin








Friday, July 1, 2022

Where did John Rock get his trees for his experimental orchards?


From the
Museum of Local History
scanned by California Revealed
 

No Guessing Required! You can look it up!

This is one of many orchard records in the various archives around town. This is the only one scanned in so far - from the Museum of Local History. Thank you! It is possibly the first orchard record.

A quick look at the sources of the various fruits/nuts planted around 1887:

Many came from the nurseries of John Rock and R.D. Fox in the Santa Clara Valley.

Ellwanger & Barry was an old nursery in New York. According to George C. Roeding, John Rock worked there. Others came from his future Biggs fruit orchard partner A.T. Hatch.  Some came from the University. Some came from local orchards - Beard, Shinn, and maybe Curtner. Felix Gillet was a competitive nurseryman in the Sierra. The Quito orchard was in the Santa Clara Valley and is now a neighborhood. From Burbank, two old varieties of apples. The other names need some research to determine what the abbreviations mean. 

Imported from the East: New York, New Jersey, Delaware, 
Imported from Europe: Tosette? Joselyn? Rivers? Many are marked Imp. which I'm beginning to suspect that Imp. means imported and will confirm at a later date.


Friday, April 29, 2022

Visiting the Pernet-Ducher roses in 1912

The Pernet-Ducher family and the Pernetiana roses

What are Pernetiana roses? 
The Pernetiana roses was a category of roses introduced by the Pernet (Pernet-Ducher) family around 1900. It’s not officially a category any longer, like hybrid tea, polyantha, grandiflora, etc. But you will still see it mentioned.