e-ReferenceDesk.com's (eRD) Logo
Custom Search
 
 
Fruits, Berries, and Nuts

Fruits, Berries, and Nuts

 

 

 

Georgia Symbols

 

Georgia Greeting

 

 

 

Georgia Symbols

'Possum, Amphibian, Art Museum, Atlas, Ballet, Beef Barbeque, Championship Cook-off, Bird, Butterfly, Center for Character Education, Creed, Crop, Fish, Flag, Floral Emblem, Folk Dance, Folk Festival, Folk Life Play, Fossil, Frontier and Southeastern Indian Interpretive Center, Fruit, Game Bird, Gem, High School, Historical Drama, Insect, Language, Marine Mammal, Mineral, Motto, Musical Theatre, Nicknames, Peanut Monument, Poet Laureate, Pork Barbeque Championship Cook-off, Poultry Capital of the World, Prepared Foods, Railroad Museum, Reptile, School, Seal, Sea Shell, Song, Tartan, Theatre, Transportation History Museum, Tree, Vegetables, Waltz, Wild Flower

 

 

 

Georgia Fruit

PeachPeach

(Prunus persica)
Adopted on April 7, 1995.

 

On April 7, 1995, Gov. Zell Miller signed an act of the Georgia General Assembly designating the peach, Prunus persica, as Georgia's official state fruit. In an unrelated move, three months later the US Postal Service released a 32-cent peach stamp.

 

 

 

On July 8, 1995, the US Postal Service released two new stamps -- one showing two peaches and one showing a pear -- with first day of issue ceremonies held at the American Topical Association's 1995 show in Reno, Nev. The stamps were issued as self-adhesives in booklet and coil formats, as well as regular gum in booklet format. The stamps were not commemorating peaches and pears; rather, they are what the Postal Service terms "definitive stamps" -- that is, they are regular stamps printed in great quantities, available for long periods of time, and are designed to carry the mail rather than commemorate something.

 

Georgia grown peaches are recognized for their superior flavor, texture, appearance and nutritious qualities that promote a healthy, balanced diet. Georgia is known as the "Peach State" because of the growers' reputation for producing the highest quality fruit.

 

Peaches were cultivated in China before written history, and moved to Persia (Iraq) along silk trading routes. The epithet persica denotes Persia, which is where Europeans first obtained peaches. Greeks and especially Romans spread the peach throughout Europe and England starting in 300-400 BC. Peaches came to the new world with explorers of the 16th-17th centuries, with Portuguese introducing it to S. America and Spaniards to N. America (Northern Florida/Georgia coast). Native Americans and settlers distributed the peach across N. America into southern Canada, and it is cultivated in 2/3 of the 48 contiguous states today.

 

The peach falls into the Prunoideae subfamily of the Rosaceae, often referred to collectively as "stone fruits". The subgenus Amygdalus contains the commercially important peach and almond. In addition, there are four other species closely related to peach: P. davidiana, P. kansuensis, P. ferganensis, and P. mira. The former two species have small fruit resembling peach, but poor eating quality and are used only as rootstocks. P. ferganensis offers the best fruit quality of the four, and is cultivated in the Fergana Valley region of the south central (former) USSR, and in western China. P. mira is a shrub form native to southern Tibet, Nepal, and northern India, where it is infrequently cultivated for its fruit.

 

There are thousands of peach cultivars worldwide, and far more are cultivated in economic quantities than for apple or pear. One reason for this is the ease with which peaches are bred (unlike apple and pear cultivars which are mostly the result of chance selection, not breeding).

 

A small tree with a spreading canopy, usually 2-3.5 m in cultivation. Trees are short-lived, generally living only 15-20 years, and even less in cultivation (e.g., the average tree life expectancy in Georgia is 8 years).

 

Leaf: Alternate, simple, lanceolate, serrated, 3 to 6 inches long, often curved along midrib, shiny dark green above, paler below.

 

Flower: Light pink to carmine, to purplish; 1 inch in diameter. Single locule, single seed inside superior ovary, surrounded by hypanthium. Color of inner surface of hypanthium is indicative of flesh color; whitish-green = white, gold = yellow. Petals can be large and showy, or small and curved on margins. Flowers are borne singly on short peduncles (almost sessile), from lateral buds on 1-yr-old wood; usually 1-2 flower buds/node. Ornamental peaches contain fully double flowers, having many petals and a carnation-like appearance. Colors range from dark pink to white.

 

Fruit: Fuzzy drupe, 3 inches across, yellow and red, hard, ribbed pit inside encloses the seed, very delicious and juicy, ripens in mid summer.

 

Twig: New growth is red and green, later turns gray brown, buds are blunt and gray fuzzy, spur shoot present.

 

Bark: Dark gray, initially smooth with elongated lenticels, later splits and becomes irregularly scaly.

 

Form: A small tree up to 15 feet with a spreading crown.

 

Act of the Georgia General Assembly

April 7, 1995

STATE GOVERNMENT -- PEACH DESIGNATED OFFICIAL STATE FRUIT.

Code Section 50-3-70 Enacted.

No. 279 (House Bill No. 559)

AN ACT

To amend Article 3 of Chapter 3 of Title 50 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to other state symbols, so as to designate the peach as the official state fruit; to provide for related matters; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.

WHEREAS, Georgia is known throughout the world as the "Peach State"; and

WHEREAS, the peach growers of this state have earned a well-deserved reputation for consistently producing peaches of the highest quality; and

WHEREAS, Georgia grown peaches are recognized for their wonderful flavor, texture, and appearance and for their nutritious qualities which promote a healthy, balanced diet; and

WHEREAS, it is only fitting and proper that the peach be properly recognized as an official symbol of this state and that its use on motor vehicle license plates, state publications, state lottery tickets, and other materials be encouraged and expanded.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:

SECTION 1.

Article 3 of Chapter 3 of Title 50 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to other state symbols, is amended by adding a new Code section at the end thereof, to be designated Code Section 50-3-70, to read as follows:

"50-3-70.

The peach is designated as the official Georgia state fruit."

SECTION 2.

All laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.

Approved April 7, 1995.

Source: Ga. Laws 1995, pp. 362-363.
 
Taxonomic Hierarchy
Kingdom Plantae -- Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta -- Vascular plants
Superdivision Spermatophyta -- Seed plants
Division Magnoliophyta -- Flowering plants
Class Magnoliopsida -- Dicotyledons
Subclass Rosidae –
Order Rosales –
Family Rosaceae – Rose family
Genus Prunus L. – plum
Species Prunus persica (L.) Batsch – peach

 

 

 

 

50 State Resource Guide

State Resource Guide

Everyone needs a little help, advice, or inspiration now and again. Find state colleges, universities, headline news, newspapers, debt consolidation, financial offerings, radios and TV stations, traffic reports, and state symbols: animals, birds, flags, flowers, seals, and more as well as quick links to social, demographic, and economic statistics.

 

 

 

 

 

 
Custom Search
 
 
Top of Page

 

© Copyright 2008, Web Marketing Services, Inc. LLC, a Clarksville, VA company.  All rights reserved.