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Topic: Rudolph Boysen


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In the News (Sat 14 Nov 09)

  
  Rudolph Boysen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rudolph Boysen (July 14, 1895 — November 25, 1950) was a horticulturist who created the boysenberry, a hybrid between several varieties of flberries, raspberries, and loganberries.
Boysen worked as Anaheim City Parks superintendent from 1921-1950.
Rudolph Boysen died at the age of 55, and is interred at the Melrose Abbey Cemetery in Anaheim.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Rudolph_Boysen   (195 words)

  
 Walter Knott
In the 1920s, Walter Knott was an somewhat unsuccessful farmer, whose fortunes changed when he nursed several abandoned berry plants back to health.
The hybrid boysenberry, named after its creator, Rudolph Boysen, was a cross between a flberry, red raspberry and loganberry.
The huge berries were a hit, and the Knott family sold berries, preserves and pies from a Buena Park, California roadside stand.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/wa/Walter_Knott.html   (261 words)

  
 PEARSON PARK
Yoch recommended a young Rudolph Boysen to supervise installation and maintenance.
Boysen is also credited with the discovery of the "Boysenberry", which made Walter Knott very famous.
The statue depicts Madame Modjeska in the role of Mary Queen of Scots.
www.anaheimcolony.com /pearson.htm   (713 words)

  
 Boysenberry - CookbookWiki
Boysenberry is a type of berry created by Rudolph Boysen which named it after his first name.
Boysen has created his berry after flberry, red raspberry and loganberry characteristics.
The boysenberry fruit is shaped like a big raspberry, has a red to purple color and a rich, sweet taste.
www.cookbookwiki.com /Boysenberry   (208 words)

  
 Rudolph Boysen Anaheim loganberries raspberries boysenberry Anaheim, California blackberries (via CobWeb/3.1 ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Rudolph Boysen (1895 — 25 November 1950) created the boysenberry, a hybrid between flberries, raspberries, and loganberries.
Boysen died in Anaheim, California aged 55, and is interred at the Melrose Abbey Cemetary in Anaheim.
In the 1930s, Anaheim Parks Superintendent Rudolph Boysen had experimented with a new strain of berry but the plants kept dying on the vine.
en.powerwissen.com.cob-web.org:8888 /CBx6XHhAJWKfze3k5CNryQ==_Rudolph_Boysen.html   (145 words)

  
 Temperate Berry Crops
Many factors have led to 'Logan's' decline in popularity including: the difficulty of picking the fruit especially with a mechanical harvester, relatively low yields, and a decline in popularity in a younger generation of consumers.
'Boysen' was discovered on Rudolph Boysen's farm in California.
'Boysen' has the growth habit of trailing flberry and the fruit are similar in appearance, larger on average, with larger drupelets, and a purple fruit color.
www.hort.purdue.edu /newcrop/proceedings1999/v4-324.html   (5950 words)

  
 May 2, 2006 ~ Knott's Berry Farm, Buena Park, California ~ Life in a Fifth Wheel RV
Knott's Berry Farm blev berømt i 1930rne, da Walter Knott sammen med Rudolph Boysen krydsede hindbær, brombær og loganbær og fik boysenbær.
Knott's Berry Farm became famous in the 1930s when Walter Knott along with Rudolph Boysen crossbred raspberries, flberries, and loganberries, making boysenberries.
On addition Cordelia had opened a restaurant, where she sold homemade chicken dinners and boysenberry pies, and they had so many customers that Walter built a replica of a ghost town around the establishment, so people would have something to look at, while they waited to eat dinner.
www.homeofourfathers.com /lisbeth/journal2may2006.htm   (311 words)

  
 The Mediadrome - Food - The Cane Berries of Summer
Rudolph Boysen of Napa, California developed the boysenberry—a hybrid of the flberry, in the early 1920's.
Boysen collaborated with Walter Knott and together they produced boysenberries on the Knott farm in Buena Park, California.
As a means of helping get through the Depression, the Knott's began selling boysenberry jams and jellies from their farmstand.
www.themediadrome.com /content/articles/food_articles/cane_berries.htm   (954 words)

  
 Knott's Berry Farm - Historical Background   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
It was not until the 1930s that Walter became associated with the "boysenberry" which would became the family trademark.
Nearby, Anaheim Parks Superintendent Rudolph Boysen had experimented with a new strain of berry but the plants kept dying on the vine.
Walter took the scraggly plants, nurtured them to health and named the new berry - a cross between a loganberry, red raspberry and flberry - after its originator.
www.knotts.com /coinfo/history/index.shtml   (1341 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
It was a boysenberry that eventually put the Knott family on the map.
Walter's friend Rudolph Boysen was the Anaheim Parks Superintendent.
The first successful crop of "boysen" berries were harvested in 1934 and they quickly became the family trademark.
www.lottaliving.com /knotts/marketplace.shtml   (515 words)

  
 Food Resource [http://food.oregonstate.edu/], Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR
Even to this day, it's considered a fine berry, due to high productivity, and a wonderful-yet-tart-flavor.
Boysenberry: Rudolph Boysen is credit for developing this berry which was introduced in the 1920s.
It was the result of flberry, raspberry and logan crosses.
food.oregonstate.edu /faq/plant/fruit/berry99.html   (285 words)

  
 Favorite Brand Name Recipes
Boysenberry is a hybrid developed by crossing the raspberry, flberry and loganberry.
It was developed in the 1920's by Rudolph Boysen.
Similar in appearance to a large raspberry, the boysenberry has a rich purple-red color and pleasantly tart flavor.
www.favoritebrandrecipes.com /ECguide/ECGhtml/66310.htm   (124 words)

  
 The background and history of Blackberries, Blueberries and Raspberries
Some of the well-established flberry hybrids, including boysenberries, loganberries, marionberries, and youngberries, are the result of such crosses.
Boysenberries were developed by Rudolph Boysen of Napa, California in the 1920s.
He abandoned the berries when he sold his farm, but Walter Knott who created Knott’s Berry Farm, rescued a few canes from the neglected property.
www.articlesender.com /articles/article3900.html   (713 words)

  
 Homestead National Monument of America   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
During the late 1920s and early ’30s, they sold berry plants directly from their farm.
Also in the ‘30s, Walter Knott began to work with a friend, Rudolph Boysen, to develop a cross between red raspberries and flberries.
When Knott successfully crossed the two, he named the new mixture "boysenberry" after his friend.
www.nps.gov /home/knott.html   (288 words)

  
 Commentary - Sierra Times.com
The very soul of Buena Park used to be Knott's Berry Farm, the oldest amusement park in America.
Walter Knott took over the few boysenberry plants that Rudolph Boysen, the man who had crossbred the plants from flberry, red raspberry and loganberries, kept after giving up on his project and changed the berry world forever.
You can read a wonderful story about a truly self-made man who had nothing given to him, didn't have an FmHA loan, no welfare or any other government projects.
www.sierratimes.com /archive/files/jul/26/edmy072601.htm   (1976 words)

  
 BuenaParkHomePrices.com - Real Estate   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
In the 1920's, Rudolph Boysen, who was an Anaheim parks manager, created the famous boysenberry.
Boysen gave some vines of his fruit-hybrid to Walter Knott, local farmer.
Back then, Buena Park was bursting with groves of avocado and orange trees, and agriculture was the main industry.
buenaparkhomeprices.com   (682 words)

  
 Anaheim Orange County California
Boysenberry Pie - Today, every boysenberry in the world can trace its roots back to Knott’s Berry Farm.
The boysenberry — a cross between a flberry, a red raspberry and a loganberry — was named after its creator, Rudolph Boysen.
Walter Knott was the first to commercially cultivate the boysenberry on his farm, which later became America's first theme park.
www.anaheimoc.org /Articles/Archive/Webpage10530.asp   (275 words)

  
 Exploring Anaheim and Orange County
It goes like this: Walter Knott had a solid, if unremarkable, business farming berries.
He got permission from Rudolph Boysen to sell and market the boysenberry -- a hybrid of flberries, raspberries, and loganberries -- at his roadside stand, still preserved near the stagecoach ride in the park.
His stand soon became quite popular in the Depression-era farming community of Orange County.
www.mouseplanet.com /beyond/bd010627.htm   (2227 words)

  
 Whole Foods Market : Products : Berry Primer
Boysenberries are the progeny of three parents — the flberry, raspberry and loganberry.
Originally bred by Rudolph Boysen in the early 20th century, they were later cultivated commercially by Walter Knott, serving as the impetus for the future fame of Knott's Berry Farm.
Similar to flberries in color, they have a somewhat sweeter taste.
www.wholefoodsmarket.com /products/produce/berryprimer.html   (2812 words)

  
 CoasterGallery.com -- Knott's Berry Farm
In 1932, Walter Knott created a new berry, a cross between the red raspberry, flberry and loganberry.
He named it the boysenberry, in honor of his friend Rudolph Boysen..
Since then, more than 200 million guests have visited the park.
www.coastergallery.com /GA/knotts.html   (169 words)

  
 So many interesting facts to know and use - meg.hourihan.com
LOGANBERRY ·; the sweet purple berry of the raspberry plant Rubus loganobaccus · created by the American judge and experimental horticulturalist James Harvey Logan, who developed the plant (c.
Some forty years later the botanist Rudolph Boysen created the hybrid BOYSENBERRY from the loganberry, the raspberry, and the flberry.
No wonder I've never seen a loganberry bush in the wild!
meg.hourihan.com /2005/02/so-many-interesting-facts-to-know-and-use   (332 words)

  
 Cooking Term - boysenberry | SizzlinChef
Here are the results for the letter Boysenberry
A flberry and raspberry hybrid named for its progenitor, Rudolph Boysen; shaped like a raspberry; has a purple-red color and a rich, sweet, tart flavor.
Type in the word you are looking for in the box below or browse by letter
sizzlinchef.com /glossary/boysenberry   (112 words)

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