Cultivar 219: Columbia

Taxon ID: 1

Usage Facet: class=edible; edible_score=1.0; ornamental_score=0.0; inferred_from_taxon=yes

Relationships: 11 | Linked Entities (visible): 3 | Evidence claims: 30 | History events: 17 | Catalog issue offerings: 0

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Evidence Badge: supported | claims=30 | sources=5 | contradictions=0

Claim Types: culinary_use:5, breeding_cross:3, description_snippet:3, hardiness_code_expansion:3, recommendation_context:3, hardiness_observation:2, rootstock_compatibility:2, taxon_context:2, breeder_reference:1, fruit_color:1, fruit_size:1, ripening_window:1, storage_duration:1, tree_form:1 | Open evidence summary JSON | Open citation drawer JSON

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Wiki Draft

Columbia is a prairie hardy crabapple, or applecrab, from Malus baccata and 'Broad Green'. It was bred in the Saunders program at Ottawa and was one of the original Saunders hybrids remembered in prairie fruit literature. Sources place its introduction in 1910 or 1911. [S6] [S9] [S8]

Prairie references link Columbia to the Experimental Farm at Ottawa and to William or W. M. Saunders. A later profile also credits its release to the Dominion Experimental Farm Service. One history of prairie apples identifies it as one of Saunders' first cross selections that stayed in commercial listings long afterward. [S9] [S6] [S1]

The fruit is small to small medium, about 3 to 4 cm across, conic to nearly round, and often ribbed. It is pale green or yellow with a strong red wash and darker striping. The flesh is yellowish and juicy, with a sub acid to acid, slightly astringent flavor. Sources agree it was not mainly a dessert apple. Quality is rated fair to good, but it is repeatedly described as too sour for eating raw. It ripens late, usually from late September into October, and one source gives it a storage life of about five weeks. [S4] [S6] [S10]

Columbia was valued more for use than for fresh eating. Prairie sources recommend it for jelly, juice, canning, sauce, and ornamental use. One recommendation list places it among the highly recommended crabapples for much of the prairie region. [S4] [S1] [S6]

The tree is described as a strong, vigorous grower that is tall, rounded, very productive, extra hardy, and comparatively free of fire blight. Sources also describe it as one of the best and hardiest of the original Saunders hybrids, with frost resistant fruit. Its seedlings were widely valued as vigorous, even, hardy rootstocks for prairie conditions, although Columbia itself was considered poor as a stembuilder because it tended to split. [S8] [S6] [S4] [S1]

Hardiness is one of the main reasons Columbia mattered historically. Sources place it in the hardest prairie class, describe it as dependably hardy, and one profile states it is hardy to Zone 1. Its long use and recommendation in prairie Canada, including Alberta and the Prairie Provinces, fits that picture. [S1] [S6]

In the broader archive, Columbia matters both as an early hardy baccata hybrid and as later breeding material. It appears as a parent in crosses such as Columbia x Dr. Bill and Columbia x Wealthy, and a University of Saskatchewan ancestry table still records a small contribution from Columbia in advanced selections. Those later breeding records show influence, not Columbia's own parentage. [S7] [S3] [S5]

Summary source basis

This summary currently draws chiefly from Edible Apples in Prairie Canada, with 6 additional supporting sources linked below.

Featured source descriptions

“Columbia is identified as one of Saunders' first cross selections.”
[1]
“Thick skin, yield fair, quality good.”
[1]
“Late ripening.”
[1]
“H1 hardiness rating.”
[1]

Parentage

Direct parent cultivars

Parentage claim text

Lineage Links

Derived or downstream cultivar links

Story Highlights

Source-story quotations

Family Navigation

Taxonomy context: No family-tree context surfaced yet.

Related cultivars mentioned in source context

GreggOlderPalmerNemahaKansas

Cold Hardiness

Zone assertions are structured rows. Hardiness claim text appears in evidence claims and page-linked citations.

Zone MinZone MaxZone TextAssertion TypeOutcomeLocationConfidence
No explicit zone assertion rows yet.

Media Gallery

No linked media assets.

Citation Drawer (Top Supporting Sources)

DocumentTitle/URLRightsClaimsRelationshipsHistory EventsPagesSnippets
3Edible Apples in Prairie Canadaunknown2600p4 p23Hardiness noted as H1, indicating the hardiest class.; Fireblight noted as FB1, meaning least susceptible to fireblight injury.; Erskine recommended it.; Manchester notes the fruits are highly frost resistant and the tre
36Dawnunknown014n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Selection origin 1945, tested as A55-101, and introduced; history: Trial/testing event 1959; history: Release event 1959
109University of Saskatchewan fruit introductions 1959-1960unknown023n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Release event 1960; history: Columbia x Wealthy; history: Columbia x Melba
67Pattersonunknown013n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Selection origin 1946, initially named Munro but later introduced by the University of; history: Selection origin University of Saskatchewan by Dr; history: Columbia x Melba
18Raspberries, Blackberries and Dewberriesunknown111n/awild x Columbia; relationship: cross_parent; history: wild x Columbia
26Andersonunknown111n/aColumbia x Wealthy; relationship: cross_parent; history: Columbia x Wealthy
33Chipmanunknown111n/aColumbia x Melba; relationship: cross_parent; history: Columbia x Melba
30Brightnessunknown011n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Columbia x Wealthy
38Exeterunknown011n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Columbia x Melba
51Kingscourtunknown011n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Columbia x Melba
70Prolificunknown011n/arelationship: cross_parent; history: Columbia x Wealthy
14A Study of Northwestern Applesunknown100p18Listed in black-caps raspberries with winter protection for District 7.

Citation Evidence (Page-Linked Quotes)

DocumentPageClaim TypeClaimQuoteMatch
14p18recommendation_contextListed in black-caps raspberries with winter protection for District 7.RASPBERRIES. District No. 7—With winter protection—Black Caps: Gregg, Older, Palmer, Nemaha, Kansas, Columbia.page_block:0.90
3p23description_snippetListed as a crabapple (crabapple or applecrab, fruit less than 5 cm diameter).Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23hardiness_code_expansionHardiness noted as H1, indicating the hardiest class.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23hardiness_code_expansionFireblight noted as FB1, meaning least susceptible to fireblight injury.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23recommendation_contextErskine recommended it.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23hardiness_observationManchester notes the fruits are highly frost resistant and the tree is dependably hardy and disease resistant.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23hardiness_observationDescribed as one of the best and hardiest original Saunders hybrids.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23tree_formNot good as a stembuilder because of a tendency to split.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23culinary_useSuitable for jelly, juice, canned product, and sauce, but too sour for eating raw.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23rootstock_compatibilityUsed as a rootstock for prairies.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23description_snippetLate ripening.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23description_snippetThick skin; yield fair; quality good.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23fruit_colorPale green fruit well washed with red.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23fruit_sizeFruit 3 to 4 cm.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23taxon_contextClassified as CR, meaning a crabapple or applecrab with fruit less than 5 cm diameter.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23breeder_referenceAssociated with Saunders, dated 1911.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p23entry_pedigreeParentage given as baccata x Broad Green.Columbia (baccata X Broad Green) Saunders (1911) CRpage_block:0.90
3p4ripening_windowSource code indicates late season.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4culinary_useSource code indicates preserving or canning.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4culinary_useSource code indicates juice.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4description_snippetListed as a crabapple (crabapple or applecrab, fruit less than 5 cm diameter).CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4rootstock_compatibilitySeedlings are a frequent rootstock.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4culinary_useRecommended for preserving or canning.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4culinary_useRecommended for juice.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4storage_durationMarked L, indicating late season.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4hardiness_code_expansionRated H1, meaning hardiest.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4taxon_contextClassified as a crabapple or applecrab with fruit less than 5 cm diameter.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90
3p4recommendation_contextListed under Highly Recommended for most of the prairie region.CR Columbia L/J/P/H1 (Seedlings are a frequent rootstock)page_block:0.90

Nursery Offering Timeline

YearNurseryCatalog IssueRelation
No catalog issue offerings linked.

Linked Entities

RelationTypeIDLabel
cross_parentcultivar114Wealthy
cross_parentcultivar112Melba
cross_parentcultivar216Wild

Evidence Claims

TypeClaimConfidence
recommendation_contextListed in black-caps raspberries with winter protection for District 7.0.97
hardiness_code_expansionHardiness noted as H1, indicating the hardiest class.0.95
hardiness_code_expansionFireblight noted as FB1, meaning least susceptible to fireblight injury.0.82
recommendation_contextErskine recommended it.0.84
hardiness_observationManchester notes the fruits are highly frost resistant and the tree is dependably hardy and disease resistant.0.92
hardiness_observationDescribed as one of the best and hardiest original Saunders hybrids.0.93
tree_formNot good as a stembuilder because of a tendency to split.0.92
culinary_useSuitable for jelly, juice, canned product, and sauce, but too sour for eating raw.0.94
rootstock_compatibilityUsed as a rootstock for prairies.0.94
description_snippetLate ripening.0.95
description_snippetThick skin; yield fair; quality good.0.93
fruit_colorPale green fruit well washed with red.0.95
fruit_sizeFruit 3 to 4 cm.0.96
taxon_contextClassified as CR, meaning a crabapple or applecrab with fruit less than 5 cm diameter.0.98
breeder_referenceAssociated with Saunders, dated 1911.0.95
entry_pedigreeParentage given as baccata x Broad Green.0.97
ripening_windowSource code indicates late season.0.90
culinary_useSource code indicates preserving or canning.0.90
culinary_useSource code indicates juice.0.90
description_snippetListed as a crabapple (crabapple or applecrab, fruit less than 5 cm diameter).0.96
rootstock_compatibilitySeedlings are a frequent rootstock.0.97
culinary_useRecommended for preserving or canning.0.98
culinary_useRecommended for juice.0.98
storage_durationMarked L, indicating late season.0.96
hardiness_code_expansionRated H1, meaning hardiest.0.99
taxon_contextClassified as a crabapple or applecrab with fruit less than 5 cm diameter.0.99
recommendation_contextListed under Highly Recommended for most of the prairie region.0.99
breeding_crossColumbia x Melba0.65
breeding_crossColumbia x Wealthy0.65
breeding_crosswild x Columbia0.65

History Events

IDTypeYearLabel
769release_event1960Release event 1960
768cross_event1960Columbia x Wealthy
762cross_event1960Columbia x Melba
571cross_event1960Columbia x Wealthy
557selection_origin_event1946Selection origin 1946, initially named Munro but later introduced by the University of
556selection_origin_eventSelection origin University of Saskatchewan by Dr
555cross_event1960Columbia x Melba
479cross_event1960Columbia x Melba
393cross_event1959Columbia x Melba
386selection_origin_event1945Selection origin 1945, tested as A55-101, and introduced
385trial_event1959Trial/testing event 1959
384release_event1959Release event 1959
383cross_event1959Columbia x Melba
363cross_event1960Columbia x Melba
356cross_event1959Columbia x Wealthy
319cross_event1960Columbia x Wealthy
243cross_event1907wild x Columbia