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American folklore is populated with larger-than-life heroes. But for those of us who have been out of school a long time, it can be difficult to remember which ones are fictional concoctions and which are real historical figures who have over time come to be credited with fanciful deeds. Paul Bunyan, the gigantic lumberjack? Fiction. Daniel Boone, the frontier explorer? Real. John Henry, the steel driver? Not real, but he may have been based on a real person or multiple people whose names and identities have disappeared into legend.
What about Johnny Appleseed, the outdoorsman who is said to have traveled on foot across the United States planting apple trees? He was a real person, actually, although some aspects of his life were mythologized over time.
John Chapman was born in Massachusetts in 1774. Little is known about his early life except that his mother died when he was young and that his father fought in the American Revolutionary War. He planted his first apple tree nurseries in the Allegheny Valley in Pennsylvania about 1798 and then began traveling west through Ohio, planting as he went. Walking for miles every day and sleeping outdoors, he kept well ahead of the pioneers, showing a knack for predicting where they would settle and planting nurseries in those spots.
It is important to note that the apple trees Chapman planted produced mostly cider apples, not the dessert and cooking varieties that most of us are accustomed to seeing in grocery stores. Cider apples are small and unpleasant to eat, but they can be used to produce hard cider, an alcoholic beverage that was a staple of the American diet, especially for pioneers who didn’t always have access to sanitary drinking water.
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Reviewed by faster share
on
September 03, 2018
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