322 THE PEARS OF NEW YORK 



Burchardt Butterbime. i. Dochnahl Fiihr. Obsikuiide 2:114. 1856. 



Considered by Dochnahl to be a seedling raised in 1833. Fruit medium, rather 

 variable, globular-ovate, uniformly bright lemon-yellow, sprinkled with fine russet; flesh 

 rather yellowish, semi-melting, aromatic, sweet; first; all Oct. 

 Bui ee Winter, i. Langley Pomona 131. 1729. 



Fruit medium, globtilar-obtuse-pyriform, somewhat depressed at both stalk and 

 calyx, speckled aU over; may be gathered early in September and in season Feb. to Apr. ; 

 first class. 

 Burgoyne. i. Ragan Nom. Pear, B. P.I. Bui. 126:68. 1908. 



Fruit large, oblong-pyriform, greenish-yellow, blushed with russet; flesh melting, juicy, 

 sweet; good; season medium. 

 Burkett. i. III. Hort. Soc. Rpi. 144. 1880. 2. Am. Pom. Soc. Rpt. 236. 1911. 



Reported to the Illinois Horticultural Society in 18S0 by C. S. Capps of Mt. Pulaski 

 who described it as a " miserable apology" for a pear, though exempt from blight. It was 

 mentioned in a communication to the American Pomological Society in 191 1 by Charles 

 G. Patten, Charles City, Iowa, as a variety which originating in Illinois had resisted blight 

 for a period of forty-five years in South Iowa. It has been suggested that this and Sudduth 

 may be the same. 

 Burlingame. i. Mag. Hort. 15:344. 1849. 2. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 711. 1869. 



Raised from seeds of pears planted in 1790. In 1830 Dr. S. P. Hildreth, Marietta, 

 Ohio, sent a description of the pear to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society which 

 named it after Mrs. Burlingame of Marietta who had originally saved the seeds. Fruit 

 below medium, globular-oblate, pale yellow, blushed with red on the sun-exposed side and 

 covered with small, russet specks; flesh white, coarse, melting and juicy, rich, sugary, 

 perfumed; Aug. and Sept. 

 Burnett, i. Kenrick i4m. Orch. 139. 1841. 2. Downing Ff. Trees Am. 712. 1869. 



Raised by Joel Burnett, Southborough, Mass., in the early half of the nineteenth 

 century. Fruit large, obtuse-pyriform, pale yellow, with much iron-russet and flushed on 

 side next the sun; flesh greenish-white, rather coarse-grained but rich, musky, juicy, sweet; 

 excellent; Oct. and Nov. 

 Butt Pear. i. Hogg F?-M2i Man. 539. 1884. 



A pear grown in England especially around Ledbury, Herefordshire, for the production 

 of perry. Fruit small, globular-obovate, lemon-color, strewed with minute, russety dots; 

 flesh yellowish, coarse-grained, granular, acidulous. 

 Butterartige Bergamotte. i. Dochnahl Fw/tr. Ofof^wMJe 2:79. 1856. 



No. 33 in the Van Mons collection, 1834. Fruit small, long-globular, dark yellow, 

 much covered with red-russet; flesh yellowish-white, semi-melting, sweet, firm, aromatic, 

 suitable for espalier; beginning of Nov. 



Biittner Sachsische Ritterbime. i. Dochnahl Fw/ir. Ofoitewde 2:23. 1856. 

 Poire de Chevalier de Buttner. 2. Mas Pom. Gen. 4:145, fig. 265. 1879. 



According to Diel this variety originated in the environs of Halle, Prussia. Fruit 

 medium or nearly medium, globular-turbinate or globular-ovate, often irregular in contour, 

 a lively green sprinlded with dots of gray-green changing to brilliant lemon-yellow at 



