Narrative
Type = Peach. Per Hedrick (see citation): "tree of medium size, vigorous, very productive; leaves seven inches long, one and three-fourths inches wide, folded upward and recurled, oval to ovate-lanceolate, spex acuminate, globose and reniform glands; flower-buds hardy, conical or pointed, pubescent, appressed or partly free, blossoms appear mid-season, flowers seven-eighths inch across, white at the center of the petals, becoming pink near the margins; fruit matures very late, two and nine-sixteenths inches long, two and one-half inches wide, round-cordate, suture shallow; pubescence short, thick, fine; skin thin, tough, adherent to the pulp; flesh golden-yellow, faintly tinged with red near the pit, juicy, stringy, tender, becomes dry with age, sweet, pleasantly flavored, aromatic; good to very good in quality; stone free; one and one-half inches long, one and one-sixteenth inches wide, oval to roundish-oval; standard in France, England and in peach regions in America from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from Canada to the Gulf; in 1875 the American Pomological Society added this peach to its list of recommended fruits under the name Salway." Per NCGR, Davis notes: on IR-2 1989 tree removal list - added to the collection per CAC recommendation.