| Pecans were popular
from the start.
The history of pecans can be traced back to the 16th century. The
only major tree nut that grows naturally in North America, the pecan
is considered one of the most valuable North American nut species.
The name "pecan" is a Native American word of Algonquin
origin that was used to describe all nuts requiring a stone to crack.
Originating in central and eastern North America and the river
valleys of Mexico, pecans were widely used by pre-colonial residents.
Pecans were favored because they were accessible to waterways, easier
to shell than other North American nut species and, of course, for
their great taste!
Because wild pecans were readily available, many Native American
tribes in the U.S. and Mexico used the wild pecan as a major food
source during autumn. It is speculated that pecans were used to
produce a fermented intoxicating drink called "Powcohicora,"
where the word "hickory" comes from. It also is said that
Native Americans first cultivated the pecan tree.
Presidents Washington and Jefferson Loved Pecans,
Too!
One
of the first known cultivated pecan tree plantings, by Spanish colonists
and Franciscans in northern Mexico, appears to have taken place
in the late 1600s or early 1700s. These plantings are documented
to around 1711 - about 60 years before the first recorded planting
by U.S. colonists.
The first U.S. pecan planting took place in Long Island, NY in
1772. By the late 1700s, pecans from the northern range reached
the English portion of the Atlantic seaboard and were planted in
the gardens of easterners such as George Washington (1775) and Thomas
Jefferson (1779). Settlers were also planting pecans in community
gardens along the Gulf Coast at this time.
In the late 1770s, the economic potential of pecans was realized
by French and Spanish colonists settling along the Gulf of Mexico.
By 1802, the French were exporting pecans to the West Indies; although,
it is speculated that pecans were exported to the West Indies and
Spain earlier by Spanish colonists in northern Mexico. By 1805,
advertisements in London said that the pecan was "...a tree
meriting attention as a cultivated crop."
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The Birth of an
Industry
New Orleans, located near the mouth of the Mississippi River, became
very important to the marketing of pecans. The city had a natural
market as well as an avenue for redistributing pecans to other parts
of the U.S. and the world. The New Orleans market gained local interest
in planting orchards, which stimulated the adaptation of vegetative
propagation techniques and led to the demand for trees that produce
superior nuts.
During
the 1700s and the early 1800s, the pecan became an item of commerce
for the American colonists and the pecan industry was born. In San
Antonio, the wild pecan harvest was more valuable than popular row
crops like cotton.
Pecan groves (trees established by natural forces) and orchards
(trees planted by man) consisted of diverse nuts with various sizes,
shapes, shell characteristics, flavor, fruiting ages, and ripening
dates. In the midst of this variability, there was the occasional
discovery of a wild tree with unusually large, thin-shelled nuts,
which were in high demand by customers.
In 1822, Abner Landrum of South Carolina discovered a pecan budding
technique that provided a way to graft plants derived from superior
wild selections or, in other words, to unite with a growing plant
by placing in close contact. However, this invention was lost or
overlooked until the 1880s when, in 1846, an African-American slave
gardener from Louisiana, named Antoine, successfully propagated
pecans by grafting a superior wild pecan to seedling pecan stocks.
Antoine's clone was named "Centennial" because it won
the Best Pecan Exhibited award at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition
in 1876. His 1876 planting, which eventually became 126 Centennial
trees, was the first official planting of improved pecans.
The
successful use of grafting techniques led to grafted orchards of
superior genotypes and proved to be a milestone for the pecan industry.
The adoption of these techniques was slow and had little commercial
impact until the 1880s when Louisiana and Texas nurserymen learned
of pecan grafting and began propagation on a commercial level.
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