Evangelist. 1. Ia. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 306. 1899.
A hardy variety grown in Iowa.
Evans. 1. Am. Pom. Soc. Rpt. 91. 1899.
Evans No. 3. 2. Mo. State Fr. Sta. Rpt. 12. 1905-06.
Evans is said to have the good characters of Elberta; ripens just after that variety is gone.
Evans Cling. 1. Kan. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 195. 1902-03.
A hardy clingstone grown in Iowa.
Everbearing. 1. Am. Pom. Soc. Rpt. 51. 1897. 2. U. S. D. A. Yearbook 498, 499, 500, Pl. 61. 1905. 3. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 37. 1909.
Everbearing originated in the garden of a Mrs. Page, Cuthbert, Georgia, in 1885, and was named and disseminated by P. J. Berckmans about 1897. A marked characteristic of this variety is that some trees have a long blossoming and fruiting period. It is too tender for the North but is recommended for southern peach-districts, having been placed on the fruit-list of the American Pomological Society in 1909. Tree vigorous, compact, productive; glands reniform; flowers large; fruit roundish-conical, large, the later-ripening fruits being smaller; cavity large, deep and abrupt; suture shallow, with a prominent apex; skin thick, tough, thickly covered with long pubescence, greenish-white, striped and mottled with purplish-red; flesh white, considerably stained and veined with red, meaty, juicy, subacid; stone oval, free; season July 1st to September or later in southern Georgia.
Excellente. 1. Mas Pom. Gen. 12:185. 1883.
Listed but not described.