- Herefordshire Pomona
The "Herefordshire Pomona" is a 19th century catalogue of the
apple s andpear s that were grown in thecounty ofHerefordshire inEngland . It was one of the first attempts to fully catalogue the existing varieties of English fruit and has been called "a classic of late Victorian natural history".cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,,1337961,00.html|title=Fallen fruit|author=George Monbiot|publisher=The Guardian|date=2004-10-30|accessdate=29 October|accessyear=2006] Only 600 copies were ever printed and originals now fetch high prices whenever they are sold.Over a period of about ten years in the late 19th century, the Pomona Committee of the
Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club of Hereford held an annual autumn show featuring the local varieties of apples and pears. The club members were worried that although Herefordshire was famous for its orchards "it was very remarkable that so few of the best varieties of apples should appear in the markets, or the fruit shops". At the behest of the committee, DrRobert Hogg , at the time Vice-President of theRoyal Horticultural Society , author of "The Fruit Manual", and editor of the "RHS Journal"; and local doctor and former president of the Woolhope club, DrHenry Graves Bull , catalogued and described the fruit displayed at the shows. The descriptions were painstakingly illustrated over a period of eight years by Alice Blanche and Edith Bull, Robert's daughter.cite web|url=http://www.marcherapple.net/pomona.htm|title=The Herefordshire Pomona: A Brief History|publisher=Marcher Apple Network|date=2005|accessdate=29 October|accessyear=2006]The book originally appeared in seven issues, the first part appearing in 1878 and the last in 1884, and included the 441 original
watercolours produced by Alice and Edith of the different fruits, buds, blossoms of thecultivar s and theblight s which attacked them.cite web|url=http://books.guardian.co.uk/commonground/story/0,,1547261,00.html|title= Where the wild things were |author=Robert Macfarlane|publisher=The Guardian|date=2005-07-30|accessdate=29 October|accessyear=2006] Once complete the seven parts were collected together and published as "The Herefordshire Pomona Containing Original Figures and Descriptions of the Most Esteemed Kinds of Apples and Pears". 600 copies were published with pebbled green morocco covers, raised bands and gilt decorative panels. They have become highly sought after and originals can command prices of over $20,000,cite web|url=http://www.polybiblio.com/antiqbot/1125056.html|title=The Herefordshire Pomona|publisher=Antiquariat Botanicum|accessdate=29 October|accessyear=2006] although the information is now available on CD at a fraction of the price.Notes
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