368 THE PEACHES OF NEW YORK 



General Laudon. i. Dochnahl Fuhr. Obstkunde 3:205. 1858. 



General Laudon is a seedling of Karl Schwarzenberg, raised about 1836. Tree 

 productive; flowers large, pale red; fruit large, oval, deeply sutiired; skin greenish-yellow, 

 blushed; flesh white, vinous; freestone; ripens at the end of August. 

 General Taylor, i. Ga. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 25. 1876. 2. Tex. Sta. Bui. 39:812. i8g6. 



General Taylor is an early clingstone of fair quality. Tree vigorous, productive; 

 glands reniform; fruit of medium size, roundish-ovate; skin creamy-white, with a red 

 cheek; ripens in Texas the last of June. 

 Genesee, i. W. N. Y. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 16. 1883. 



Fruit medium to large; flesh creamy-white, juicy; freestone; ripens in October. 

 Genueser. i. Christ Handb. 591. 18 17. 



Peche de Genes. 2. Christ Worterb. 351. 1802. 



Genueser Aprikosenpfirsich. 3. Dochnahl Fuhr. Obstkunde 3:218. 1858. 



Flowers small; fruit large, round, halves Tmequal; suttire shallow; skin yellow, more 

 or less mottled with clear red; flesh deep yellow, pleasing, melting; freestone; ripens early 

 in October. 

 George Late. i. Cal. Bd. Hort. Rpt. 73. 1891. 2. Cal. Nur. Cat. 20. 1898. 



George Late originated in Sacramento, California, where the fruit is much esteemed 

 as a clingstone because of its rich color, large size and superior shipping qualities. The 

 trees on the Station grounds have not yet fruited. 

 Georgia Press, i. Greensboro Nur. Cat. 25. 1898. 



Fruit large; flesh nearly white, juicy, acid; ripens in August, according to the Greens- 

 boro Nurseries, Greensboro, North Carolina. 

 Gest Superb, i. Elliott Fr. Book 292. 1854. 



An American variety bearing globose glands; fruit large, roundish; skin yellowish- 

 white; flesh firm, subacid; ripens in September. 

 Gestreifter Blutpfirsich. i. Dochnahl Fuhr. Obstkunde 3:194. 1858. 



Resembles SanguinOle but longer. Fruit striped; flesh clear red, not adhering to 

 the pit; ripens early in October. 

 Gettysburg, i. Rural N. Y. 62:820, fig. 304. 1903. 



Found and named by Earl Peters, Mount Holly Springs, Pennsylvania, who claims 

 it to be the latest and best yellow-fleshed freestone in that vicinity. 

 Gibbon, i. Gard. Mon. 21:149. 1879. 



Fruit large, oval, terminating in an acute, swollen tip; skin clear yellow, blushed; 

 flesh yellow, melting, juicy; ripens the middle of August. 

 Gibbon October, i. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 44. 1891. 2. Griffing Cat. 10. 1910. 



A seedling of the Spanish type from northern Florida. In 1891, it appeared on the 

 fruit-list of the American Pomological Society but was soon dropped. It is one of the 

 last white-fleshed, freestone peaches to mature, ripening at the last of September. 

 Gibson, i. Mich. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 242. 1886. 2. Mich. Sta. Sp. Bui. 44:42. 1910. 



A seedling raised by Eugene Gibson, New Richmond, Michigan. The variety was 

 said to be earlier than either Amsden or Alexander. It was thought by some to be 

 identical with the Champion of Michigan. Leaves deeply serrate; susceptible to mildew. 



