Wagener (apple)

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Cultivar'Wagener'
OriginPenn Yan, New York, United States, around 1791
Wagener
Cultivar'Wagener'
OriginPenn Yan, New York, United States, around 1791

The Wagener (also called Wagener Price and Wagoner[1]) is a cultivar of the domesticated apple. It was first farmed in 1791 in New York, and is the parent of the Idared and, possibly, the Northern Spy. Despite the early popularity of the Wagener, it is no longer widely grown.

In 1791, George Wheeler started a seedling farm in the area of Penn Yan, New York, with apple seeds that he had brought from Dutchess County, New York. Abraham Wagener, the namesake for the Wagener apple, purchased the nursery in 1795 and planted the trees on his land. The apple was recognized by the New York State Agricultural Society in 1847, and began to be propagated extensively in the United States.[2][3] In 1910, it was brought to England where it received an Award of Merit from the Royal Horticultural Society.[4]

Appearance and flavor

Cultivation

References

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