Site of Atwood Grove and Origin of World's 1st Pink Grapefruit/Grapefruit Introduced to Florida in 1846
Posted by: Markerman62
N 27° 31.287 W 082° 32.781
17R E 347281 N 3045145
Located between Ellenton and Palmetto describing an agriculture first.
Waymark Code: WMHQW0
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 08/06/2013
Views: 12
Side 1
Across U.S. 301 stood the Kimball C. Atwood Grapefruit Grove and Manavista, a town that he founded in 1892 and encircled with 100 (mile-long) rows of trees. Here in 1913 grove supervisor R.B. Foster found a biological mutation of Pink-fleshed fruit growing on a single limb of a Walters Seedless yellow-fruited grapefruit tree. Citrus growers later labeled the oddity "nature's million dollar mistake." Reasoner Brothers Royal Palm Nurseries grafted budwood from this source onto orange stock, resulting in the 1914 introduction "Foster Seedless Pink Grapefruit." Texas bought its original trees from this Oneco nursery in the 1920s.
Side 2
Grapefruit reached the New World in 1696 after crossing the Pacific in a ship commanded by Captain Shaddock. The fruit was introduced to the island of Barbados in the West Indies and became known as the pomelo and shaddock, the latter after the importer. Names were later changed to "grapefruit" because it grows in clusters, like a grape. The next moves were Jamaica and Cuba and from there Count Odet Philippe introduced grapefruit to Florida in 1846 to what is now Safety Harbor in Pinellas County. In 1963, he was elected to the Florida Citrus Hall of Fame located in Winter Haven.
Marker Number: 0
Date: 1999
County: Manatee
Marker Type: Roadside
Sponsored or placed by: Manatee County Historical Society
Website: Not listed
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