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More History of the Key Lime Tree
The Mexican lime is native to the Indo-Malayan region. It
was unknown in Europe before the Crusades and it is assumed to have been carried
to North Africa and the Near East by Arabs and taken by Crusaders from Palestine
to Mediterranean Europe. In the mid-13th Century, it was cultivated and
well-known in Italy and probably also in France. It was undoubtedly introduced
into the Caribbean islands and Mexico by the Spaniards, for it was reportedly
commonly grown in Haiti in 1520. It readily became naturalized in the West
Indies and Mexico, There is no known record of its arrival in Florida. Dr. Henry
Perrine planted limes from Yucatan on Indian Key and possibly elsewhere. In
1839, cultivation of limes in southern Florida was reported to be "increasing".
The lime became a common dooryard fruit and by 1883 was being grown commercially
on a small scale in Orange and Lake Counties. When pineapple culture was
abandoned on the Florida Keys, because of soil depletion and the 1906 hurricane,
people began planting limes as a substitute crop for the Keys and the islands
off Ft. Myers on the west coast. The fruits were pickled in saltwater and
shipped to Boston where they were a popular snack for school children. The
little industry flourished especially between 1913 and 1923, but was demolished
by the infamous hurricane of 1926. Thereafter, the lime was once again mainly a
casual dooryard resource on the Keys and the southern part of the Florida
mainland.
In 1953, George D. Fleming, Jr., proprietor of Key Lime
Associates, at Rock Harbor, on Key Largo, was the chief producer of limes.
Though he had sold several of his groves, he was developing a new one as part of
a "vacation cottage colony".
Fearing that this little lime might disappear with lack of
demand and the burgeoning development of the Keys, the Upper Florida Keys
Chamber of Commerce launched in 1954, and again in 1959 with the help of the
Upper Keys Kiwanis Club, an educational campaign to arouse interest and
encourage residents to plant the lime and nurseries to propagate the tree for
sale.
The Mexican lime continues to be cultivated more or less on a
commercial scale in India, Egypt, Mexico, the West Indies, tropical America, and
throughout the tropics of the Old World. There are 2,000,000 seedling trees near
Colima, Mexico. Mexico raises this lime primarily for sale as fresh fruit but
also exports juice and lime oil. New plantings are being made to elevate oil
production. In 1975, Rodolfo Guillen Paiz, Chief of the Citrus and Tropical
Fruit Subproject of ANACAFE in Guatemala, reported the initiation of a program
to establish the Mexican lime as an all-year commercial crop for the fresh fruit
market, the production of juice and lime peel oil, and, as a first step, the
creation of a collection of selections as a genetic base for development of an
industry, possibly in association with cattle-raising since it had been observed
that cattle do little damage to the trees.
Production of Mexican limes for juice has been the major
industry on the small Caribbean island of Dominica for generations. There are at
least 8 factories expressing the juice which is exported largely to the United
Kingdom in wooden casks after "settling" in wooden vats and clarifying. In
England, it is bottled as the world-famous "Rose's Lime Juice" put out by L.
Rose & Co., Ltd., or as the somewhat different product of the chief competitor,
A. C. Shellingford & Co. Surplus juice, over their requirements, is sold to
soft-drink manufacturers. Since 1960, Rose has produced lime juice concentrate
in Dominica for export. There is also considerable export of lime oil distilled
from lime juice and oil expressed from the whole fruit. Jamaica, Grenada,
Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, and the Dominican Republic export lesser amounts of
juice and oil. But the Dominican Republic has recently enlarged its plantings in
order to increase its oil output. Montserrat ships only juice. Ghana is now the
leading producer of lime juice and oil for L. Rose & Co., Ltd. Gambia began
serious lime processing in 1967.
The Mexican lime grows wild in the warm valleys of the
Himalayas and is cultivated not only in the lowlands but up to an elevation of
4,000 ft (1,200 m). It was first planted on the South Pacific island of Niue in
1930. A small commercial industry has been expanding since 1966. Some of the
fruit is sold fresh but most of the crop is processed for juice and oil by the
Niue Development Board Factory. These products are shipped to New Zealand, as
are a good part of the peels for the manufacture of marmalade and jam.
Production was crippled by a hurricane in 1979. This storm inspired a search for
rootstocks that could be expected to withstand strong winds.
The Mexican lime is native to the Indo-Malayan region. It was
unknown in Europe before the Crusades and it is assumed to have been carried to
North Africa and the Near East by Arabs and taken by Crusaders from Palestine to
Mediterranean Europe. In the mid-13th Century, it was cultivated and well-known
in Italy and probably also in France. It was undoubtedly introduced into the
Caribbean islands and Mexico by the Spaniards, for it was reportedly commonly
grown in Haiti in 1520. It readily became naturalized in the West Indies and
Mexico, There is no known record of its arrival in Florida. Dr. Henry Perrine
planted limes from Yucatan on Indian Key and possibly elsewhere. In 1839,
cultivation of limes in southern Florida was reported to be "increasing". The
lime became a common dooryard fruit and by 1883 was being grown commercially on
a small scale in Orange and Lake Counties. When pineapple culture was abandoned
on the Florida Keys, because of soil depletion and the 1906 hurricane, people
began planting limes as a substitute crop for the Keys and the islands off Ft.
Myers on the west coast. The fruits were pickled in saltwater and shipped to
Boston where they were a popular snack for school children. The little industry
flourished especially between 1913 and 1923, but was demolished by the infamous
hurricane of 1926. Thereafter, the lime was once again mainly a casual dooryard
resource on the Keys and the southern part of the Florida mainland.
Even More
Information....
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