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History of
Cranberries
The cranberry, along with the
blueberry and Concord grape, is
one of North America's three
native fruits that are
commercially grown. Cranberries
were first used by Native
Americans, who discovered the
wild berry's versatility as a
food, fabric dye and healing
agent. Today, cranberries are
commercially grown throughout
the northern part of the United
States and are available in both
fresh and processed forms.
The name "cranberry" derives
from the Pilgrim name for the
fruit, "craneberry", so called
because the small, pink blossoms
that appear in the spring
resemble the head and bill of a
Sandhill crane. European
settlers adopted the Native
American uses for the fruit and
found the berry a valuable
bartering tool.
American whalers and mariners
carried cranberries on their
voyages to prevent scurvy. In
1816, Captain Henry Hall became
the first to successfully
cultivate cranberries. By 1871,
the first association of
cranberry growers in the United
States had formed, and now, U.S.
farmers harvest approximately
40,000 acres of cranberries each
year.
The
History of Cranberry Production
In 1910 the more
efficient, but still labor
intensive, rocker scoop replaced
earlier scoops used to harvest
cranberries.
Of all fruits, only three - the
blueberry, the Concord grape and
the cranberry can trace their
roots to North American soil.
The cranberry helped sustain
Americans for hundreds of years.
Native Americans used
cranberries in a variety of
foods, the most popular was
pemmican - a high protein
combination of crushed
cranberries, dried deer meat and
melted fat - they also used it
as a medicine to treat arrow
wounds and as a dye for rugs and
blankets.
Cultivation of the cranberry
began around 1816, shortly after
Captain Henry Hall, of Dennis,
Massachusetts, noticed that the
wild cranberries in his bogs
grew better when sand blew over
them. Captain Hall began
transplanting his cranberry
vines, fencing them in, and
spreading sand on them himself.
When others heard of Hall's
technique, it was quickly
copied. Continuing throughout
the 19th century, the number of
growers increased steadily.
Cranberries are a unique fruit.
They can only grow and survive
under a very special combination
of factors: they require an acid
peat soil, an adequate fresh
water supply, sand and a growing
season that stretches from April
to November, including a
dormancy period in the winter
months that provides an extended
chilling period, necessary to
mature fruiting buds.
Contrary to popular belief,
cranberries do not grow in
water. Instead, they grow on
vines in impermeable beds
layered with sand, peat, gravel
and clay. These beds, commonly
known as "bogs," were originally
made by glacial deposits.
Normally, growers do not have to
replant since an undamaged
cranberry vine will survive
indefinitely. Some vines in
Massachusetts are more than 150
years old.
In addition to Massachusetts,
the major growing areas for
cranberries are New Jersey,
Oregon, Washington, Wisconsin,
and in the Canadian provinces of
British Columbia and Quebec.
Additional regions with
cranberry production include
Delaware, Maine, Michigan, New
York, Rhode Island, as well as
the Canadian provinces of New
Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario
and Prince Edward Island.
Altogether the entire cranberry
industry is supported by
approximately 47,000 acres, of
which 14,000 are in
Massachusetts. |