122 THE CHERRIES OF NEW YORK 



lower surface light green, faintly pubescent; apex acute, base abrupt; margin coarsely 

 and doubly serrate; petiole about one and one-half inches long, tinged with red, with a few 

 hairs, with from one to four reniform, reddish glands, usually on the stalk. 



Buds large, pointed, plump, free, arranged singly as lateral buds or in clusters 

 variable in size on short spurs; leaf -scars prominent; season of bloom intermediate; flowers 

 white, one and three-eighths inches across; borne in scattering clusters, in ones, twos or 

 threes; pedicels one and one-fourth inches long, glabrous, greenish; calyx-tube tinged 

 with red, campanulate, glabrous; calyx-lobes with reddish tinge, broad, acute, glabrous 

 within and without, reflexed; petals roundish, entire, nearly sessile, with a shallow notch 

 at the apex; filaments one-half inch long; pistil glabrous, shorter than the stamens. 



Fruit matures late; about three-fourths of an inch in diameter, cordate; cavity wide, 

 flaring; suture shallow, indistinct; apex slightly pointed, with a small depression at the 

 center; color purplish-black; dots numerous, small, dark russet, inconspicuovis; stem slender, 

 one and one-fourth inches long, adherent to the fruit; skin thin, tender, adherent to the 

 pulp; flesh dark red, with dark colored juice, very meaty, crisp, nuld, somewhat aromatic, 

 sweet; of good quality; stone clinging, longer than wide, ovate, flattened, with smooth 

 surfaces, somewhat marked with a reddish tinge. 



DOUBLE GLASS 



Prunus avium X Prunus cerasus 



I. Truchsess-Heim Kirschensort. 440-451, 487-490, 689. 1819. 2. Dochnahl Fuhr. Obstkunde 3:51. 

 52. 1858. 3. III. Handb. 163 fig., 164. i860. 4. Mich. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 329. 1888. 5. la. Hort. Soc. 

 Rpt. 80. 1890. 6. Can. Exp. Farm Bui. 17:7. 1892. 7. Budd-Hansen Am. Hort. Man. 2:274. 1903. 



AmareUe Double de Verre. 8. Mortillet Le Cerisier 2:197-201, fig. 55. 1866. 



Great Cornelian. 9. Hogg Fruit Man. 299. 1884. 



Glass. 10. la. Sta. Bid. 73:70. 1903. 



Double Glass is a Dtike, a hybrid more nearly resembling the Sweet 

 Cherry than the Sour Cherry. The trees grow remarkably well in ntirsery 

 and orchard and their behavior so pleased growers when the variety was 

 brought to notice that it became for a time quite the vogue. But the 

 trees turned out to be unproductive and the cherries so mediocre that 

 the variety rapidly passed through its heyday of popularity. The fruits 

 are curiously marked, the sutiire being so deep as to make them appear 

 double — hence the name. The variety has no value where sweet sorts 

 are hardy but possibly might find a niche somewhere in regions where a 

 more tender Sweet Cherry cannot be grown. 



This variety, of ancient and unknown origin, dates back at least to 

 1792 when Truchsess received it from Christ under the names Grosse 

 Friihkirsche and Englische Erzherzogskirsche, both of which were incorrect, 

 the first because it was not characteristic since the fniit did not ripen early, 

 and the second because it denoted a class of dark-fleshed cherries. In 



