| 0 | PI 673550 | 'Marigold' | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | New Jersey, United States | DAV |  | | 1990 | DEVELOPED | 1925 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Per Okie (see citation): "flower large; medium-high cropping efficiency; 950 hr tree chilling requirement; reniform glands; pubescent skin; flesh yellow, red at pit; fruit medium size, round-oval, tender, melting, very good eating quality; groud color light yellow; semi-cling; thin skin peels easily; too soft for commericial use." Per NCGR, Davis file notes: on IR-2 1989 tree removal list. Per Brooks and Olmo (see citation): "ripens early, with Arp and 1 mo. before Elberta; difficult to pick because of strong attachment and softening at maturity." | 1014737 | PI 673550 |
| 1 | PI 673551 | 'Prarie Schooner' | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | Illinois, United States | DAV |  | | 1990 | DEVELOPED | 1933 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Per Brooks and Olmo, Okie (see citations): "medium cropping efficiency; 950 hr. tree chilling requirement; reniform glands; light yellow flesh; fruit large, oval, medium firmness, good eating quality; light yellow ground color; semi-cling; moderate susceptibility to bacterial spot." | 1014743 | PI 673551 |
| 2 | PI 673499 | Greensboro | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | North Carolina, United States | DAV |  | | 1986 | COLLECTED | 1894 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Notes on this cultivar: Once one of the leading white-fleshed cultivars. Widely adapted. Flower pale pink, showy, large; blooms late, although Hedrick says it's early; cropping efficiency high (sets heavily); chilling requirement 1000 hours; flesh white, fruit size 2 1/2 X 2 3/8 inches, round shape, white ground color, very little blush, flesh not very firm, good eating quality; semi-free stone, some split according to Hedrick; ripens 18 days before Elberta; resistant to bacterial leaf spot. From The Peaches of New York, p. 223: "Picked green the stone clings; picked at maturity the variety may be called a freestone...reniform glands...[fruit] color creamy-white, blushed red...skin rather tough...flesh white...melting...[stone] one and seven-sixteenths inches long, one inch wide." | 1007946 | PI 673499 |
| 3 | DPRU 1181 | 'Slappey' | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | | | | Historic | 1987 | DONATED | 1903 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Freestone peach. Per Hedrick (see citation): "Fruit medium in size, roundish, inclining to conic with prominant tip and suture; color golden yellow, shaded with red and crimson; flesh yellow, low firmness, somewhat mealy, sweet; good quality; pit free..." Per Whealy (see citation): "Thin, almost fuzzless skin." Per Okie (see citation): "Non showy bloom; medium yield; susceptible to bac. leaf spot; reniform glands; tree chilling factor is 750; ripens late August (five days after Elberta); good for canning." | 1011972 | DPRU 1181 |
| 4 | DPRU 1191 | 'Champion White' | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | Illinois, United States | | | Historic | 1987 | DEVELOPED | 1890 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Per Okie, Hedrick, and Whealy (see citation): Freestone; tree large, vigorous, spreading, open-topped, very productive, globose petiole gland shape, 1000 hr chilling requirement; flower buds large, medium in length, plump, conical, pubescent, free; blossoms appear in mid-season; flowers pink, non-showy, less than one inch across; fruit matures in early mid-season (ten days before Elberta), is two and one-fourths inches long, two and three-eighths inches wide, round or round-oval with tip and suture; flesh is white, tinged red at the pit, very juicy, markedly tender, sweet, pleasant flavored, very good; stone semi-free to free, one and one-half inches long, about one inch wide, oval; heavy fuzz on skin; peach resistant to bac. leaf spot, but inviting to brown-rot; trees sometimes defoliated with leaf-curl. Once considered the standard for quality. A very old cultivar but still available. One of the few extant U.S. cultivars of no relation to Chinese Cling. Leading white variety. Also good for the home garden. | 1012040 | DPRU 1191 |
| 5 | DPRU 656 | Flat Peach of China | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | Georgia, United States | | | Historic | 1985 | COLLECTED | 1869 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Per Okie (see citation): "Showy flowers, early season of bloom, low cropping efficiency; 450 chilling requirement; globose glands; pubescent skin; flesh white, low firmness; flat fruit shape; fair eating quality, acid flavor; freestone; ripens 17 days prior to Elberta. Uneven shape. Cracks on the bottem. Picking often tears flesh at the stem." Per The Peach and Nectarine: "The oldest known variety of peach in China. Parent of a very distinct flavour. Nearly all the seedlings of Peento are better than their parents. Size medium; shape flat with depression in centre, from which a spot of gum frequently oozes; skin green with slight red blush in the sun; flesh tender, juicy and aromatic; free and very small stone. Ripens December. Useless for anything but dessert; is a garden rather than an orchard variety. Suitable for bush and low veld of the Transvaal, midland and coastal districts of Natal, and the Eastern Province of the Cape." Per Manual of Fruits: "Flowers large; glands reniform; fruit small, so much depressed at both ends as to form a deep hollow on each; in the top one is set a broad, rough, and five-angled eye; skin pale yellowish green, mottled with red next the sun; flesh pale yellow, free, red at the stone, sweet, juicy, and noyeau-flavored; forces well in pots. Middle and end of September." | 1007834 | DPRU 656 |
| 6 | DPRU 428 | J.H. Hale | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | Washington, United States | | | Historic | 1985 | DONATED | 01/09/1985 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Per Okie (see citation): "Gland: reniform; Bloom: non-showy, pollen sterile; Shape: round-oblate; Firmness: medium; Looks: attractive, short pubescence; Quality: very good; Yield: low-medium, large size; Bac. spot: moderately susceptible; Chill: 850; Pit: freestone; Remarks: Found in a lot of Early Rivers peaches. Pollen sterile so pollenizer variety required. Once a widely planted peach and found in the pedigree of many current cultivars. Mr. Hale also operated large orchards in Georgia back in those days. Carries gene for Mdh1-1." Per Hedrick (see citation): "This remarkable variety is a chance seedling found by J.H. Hale, South Glastonbury, Connecticut. Tree vigorous, upright spreading, open-topped, productive...Leaves six and three-fourths inches long, one and three-fourths inches wide...petiole five-sixteenths inch long, thick, with one to five reniform, dark brown glands of medium size; flowers appear mid-season...Fruit matures in mid-season; three inches long, three and one-fourth inches wide, regular, round, with equal halves...color lemon-yellow overspread with attractive dark red and with mottlings and splashes of carmind; pubescence light; skin thick, tough...flesh yellow...stone free, one and three-fourths inches long, one and one-fourth inches wide, oval..." | 1006254 | DPRU 428 |
| 7 | DPRU 433 | Siberian C | Prunus persica (L.) Batsch | Ontario, Canada | | | Historic | 1985 | DEVELOPED | PRE 1965 | | | | | Cultivar | Type = Peach. Per Okie (see citation): "Gland: reniform; Bloom: showy; Shape: oblong, prominant tip; Firmness: low; Looks: green with a slight red blush; unattractive; fuzzy; Quality: poor; Yield: high; small fruit size; Bac spot: highly resistant; Remarks: cold hardy, semi-dwarfing rootstock for peach, but susceptible to nematodes. Performs well in northern area but poorly in the South. Enhances bud hardiness in northern U.S. and Canada. Homozygous for Mdh1-1. Pedigree: unknown, selected from a cold hardy seed line obtained from China via Poland." Per Brooks and Olmo (see citation): "Introd. in 1965. Parentage unknown. Fruit: flesh white, freestone. Tree: chief characteristic is its value as a rootstock, hardy, early fall wood maturation and semi-dwarfing size controlling properties, frost tolerant." | 1006295 | DPRU 433 |