John McIntosh
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This article refers to the apple farmer. For other references, see John McIntosh (disambiguation).
John McIntosh (August 15, 1777 – ca 1846) was the Canadian farmer who is credited with discovering the McIntosh Red apple.
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[edit] Overview
He was born in the Mohawk Valley in New York state in 1777, the son of a Scottish immigrant who was a loyalist during the American Revolution. John came to Upper Canada sometime between 1795 and 1801 and settled in Matilda Township, now part of South Dundas Township.
While clearing his property, John or his son Allen discovered a number of seedling apple trees growing wild. He transplanted them to his garden, and by the following year only one had survived.
Several years later, the tree was producing the crisp, delicious fruit that everyone is familiar with today. The discoverer eventually dubbed it the "McIntosh Red", which is still the apple's official name. For years, he had no luck propagating the variety because apples don't grow true from seed.
[edit] Grafting
Chance again played a role in 1835 when he and his son, Allen, learned from a visitor the art of grafting cuttings or scions from the original tree. With this cloning technique at their disposal, production of the McIntosh Red could finally branch out.
By the late 1830s, Allen and his brother Alexander ("Sandy") had taken over the farm operation from their father. From their well organized nursery, they extensively promoted and nurtured the new species. However, it wasn't until the turn of the 20th Century that conditions really began to improve for the McIntosh, with the advent of fungicidal sprays that countered its natural susceptibility to apple scab. Market penetration grew and grew, and today, millions of McIntosh apple trees are in production. The Mac and its hybrids account for more than 50 percent of the apple crop in Canada.
[edit] Original tree
The original tree that spawned this legacy was damaged by fire in 1894. The McIntosh family nursed the old tree along until 1908 -- the last year it produced a crop -- and in 1910, it fell over. A flat headstone now marks the spot where the stump had remained for years. At least three plaques commemorating the site's historic value are also located in the vicinity. In 1962, the Ontario Heritage Foundation erected a plaque outside the former McIntosh homestead. In 2001 the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada unveiled another plaque in a nearby park and declared the apple's discovery and development an "event of national historic importance." The park, which belongs to the Township of South Dundas, also features a large hand-painted mural depicting the apple's history.
William Tyrrell Macoun of the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa is credited with popularizing this variety of apple in Canada. Other apple varieties derived from the McIntosh include the Macoun and Cortland.
McIntosh farmed the original property until his death, sometime between September 19 1845 and January 10 1846, near the current site of Dundela, Ontario.