412 THE PEARS OF NEW YORK 



Harigelsbime. i. Dochnahl Fuhr. Obsikunde 2: ij 2. 1856. 



Wurttemberg, 1830. Fruit medium, obtuse-conic, light green changing to golden 

 yellow, with a dark blush; flesh rather astringent, sweet, breaking, aromatic; third for table, 

 not of much account for cooking; Oct. 

 Hamard. i. N. J. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 11. 1877. 



Shown before the New Jersey State Horticultural Society in 1877. Said to be "a 

 seedling from the farm of John Harnard, Springfield," N. J., and to have originated about 

 30 years previously. A cooking pear, valued for its regular and abundant bearing and 

 keeping qualities. 

 Harris (Georgia), i. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 779. 1869. 



Disseminated from Georgia. Fruit medium, obovate-obtuse to obovate-acute- 

 pyriform, pale yellow, deep red in the sun, many green and brown dots; flesh whitish, 

 buttery, not juicy, sweet; good; Sept. 



Harris (Massachusetts), i. Mass. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 153. 1874. 2. Downing Fr. Trees 

 Am. 2nd App., 149, fig. 1872. 



Raised by Lemuel Clapp, Dorchester, Alass., from Urbaniste crossed with Beurr6 

 Bosc. Fruit above medium, ovate-pyriform, resembling Beurr^ Hardy; stem medium 

 long; flesh yellowish-white, fine grained, very tender, melting, juicy, rich, vinous, spirited, 

 aromatic; very good to best; Oct. 

 Harrison Large Fall. i. Downing Fr. Trees Am. sys. 1857. 



Rushmore. 2. Leroy Diet. Pom. 2:608, fig. 1869. 



A fine old baking pear of American origin. Fruit large, irregular, inclined, obovate- 

 obtuse-pyriform, pale yellow with a red cheek; Aug. to Oct. 

 Hartberger Mostbime. i. Loschnig Mos/fcirMew 14, fig. 1913. 



A perry pear grown in Hungary and Austria. Fruit medium, globular and irregular, 

 somewhat acute toward the stalk, dark green turning to yellow-green, finely dotted and 

 much covered with russet; flesh greenish- white, abnormally large core and seeds, firm and 

 juicy; Oct. 

 Harte Neapolitanerin. j. IDochnahlFuhr. Ohstkunde 2:i()2. 1856. 



Although cultivated mainly at Naples, Italy, in the middle of the last century and 

 called the pear of Naples, it appears to have been first published in France in 1802. Fruit 

 medium, turbinate, medium ventriculous, light green changing to lemon-yellow, blushed; 

 flesh firm, sweetish, aromatic; very good for culinary uses; Jan. to summer. 

 Harvard, i. Mcintosh 5fe. CarJ. 2:457. 1855. 2. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 779. 1869. 



Belle de Flushing. 3. 'Lexoy Diet. Pom. 1:201, fig. 1867. 



Originated at Cambridge, Mass. In 185 1 it was taken from America to France with- 

 out a label by Parsons, a nurseryman at Flushing, N. Y., and was named Belle de Flushing 

 by Leroy. Fruit rather large, oblong-pyriform, russety olive- yellow, with a brownish-red 

 cheek; in France it seems to develop a vivid red on the side exposed to the sun, finely dotted 

 with fawn; flesh white, semi-fine, tender, melting, slightly gritty: juice abundant, saccha- 

 rine, acidulous and agreeably musky; second; a fine commercial variety; Aug. and Sept. 

 Harvest, i. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 779. 1869. 



An American variety. Fruit below medium, globular, pale yellow, tinged with brown- 



