By Mr. John Turner. 



the Darlington Pippin and Copmaniliorpe Crab, were seed- 

 lings of a superior kind, but are not known to the London 

 gardeners. They are described by Mr. Backhouse as great 

 bearers. 



October 20th. John Elliot, Esq. sent a collection of 

 very fine sorts ; among them were several not common in 

 the neighbourhood of London. 



Mr. Hugh Ronalds of Brentford, exhibited fifty-three 

 sorts, in addition to his former collection, and in no respect 

 inferior. 



Robert Holden, Esq. exhibited one hundred and twenty 

 sorts, collected in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire. This 

 collection was curious on account of the great number of 

 purely provincial Apples which it contained ; the most valu- 

 able are included in the annexed Lists. 



Sir George Stewart Mackenzie sent three sorts of 

 Scotch Apples. One of them, the Brown Apple of Burnt- 

 Island, deserves general cultivation. 



Michael Mucklow Zachary, Esq. exhibited seven 

 fine specimens of excellent varieties, grown on dwarf trees, in 

 his garden at Strand-on-the-Green. 



Mr. Moses Brown of Glasgow sent seventy-eight sorts 

 of Scotch Apples, including all the early varieties produced 

 in Clydesdale. 



November 3rd. John Sudlow, Esq. of Thames Ditton, 

 sent to this and several subsequent Meetings, specimens of a 

 middle sized conical Apple, under the name of the Fall Pippin, 

 the produce of a tree imported from America. It is a very 

 rich Pine-flavoured Apple, and is said to be the same which 



vol. in. T t 



