Showing posts with label #Oregon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Oregon. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2020

Bing Cherry History

by Shanna Hatfield




While I was digging into research for my current work in progress, I came across an article in an old newspaper about a new variety of cherries called Bing. 

Those delicious, darkly sweet little orbs of summer goodness were developed in Oregon back in the 1800s! 

In 1847, Henderson Luelling transported cherries by oxcart from Iowa along the Oregon trail to the Willamette Valley. 
Courtesy Oregon Hist. Soc. Research Lib

Seth Lewelling (Henderson's brother who changed the spelling of their name), established a commercial fruit tree nursery near present day Milwaukie, Oregon, where the Bing cherry was created. Some say it is his Manchurian foreman, Ah Bing, is the one who actually developed the cherry. At any rate, Seth named the cherry after his foreman. 

Bing cherries are a cross between a Black Republican cherry and a Napoleon, a light-skinned cherry from France that become known as a Royal Ann Cherry in Oregon. 

Courtesy Oregon Hist. Soc. Research Lib

One of the most popular cherries in the world, Bing's have become the most widely planted cherry variety in the United States. It wasn't until the 1990s when other varieties of sweet cherries began to pop up in markets. Until that time, Bing was the only dark red, fresh market cherry grown commercially in the Pacific Northwest and the largest cherry production in the United States. 

It remains the most popular planted cherry in Wasco County, Oregon, the biggest cherry-producing county in Oregon.  Bing cherries thrive in the drier regions of central and eastern Oregon due to a tendency to split open in rainy areas. In spite of its flaws, it continues to be one of the top choices of sweet cherries in the world. 

We love cherries at our house, so I'm sharing an easy recipe with you today. 




Cherry Mint Bruschetta

1 frozen waffle

2 tbsp. goat cheese

6 large cherries

1 tsp. grenadine syrup

1 tsp. chopped mint

Cherries and mint for garnish, if desired

Pit and chop cherries, scoop into a bowl and mix with mint. If you are using fresh mint, right off the plant, it is strong, so you can cut back the amount to 1/2 tsp. Stir in grenadine syrup and set aside.

Toast the frozen waffle until it is crunchy on the outside. Cut into quarters. Top with a sprinkling of goat cheese then spoon on cherry-mint mix.

Serves two.


For more information about my upcoming release or details about my books, please visit my website:

After spending her formative years on a farm in eastern Oregon, hopeless romantic Shanna Hatfield turns her rural experiences into sweet historical and contemporary romances filled with sarcasm, humor, and hunky heroes.

When this USA Today bestselling author isn’t writing or covertly seeking dark, decadent chocolate, Shanna hangs out with her beloved husband, Captain Cavedweller.

Shanna loves to hear from readers. Follow her online at:

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Thursday, June 13, 2019

A Town in Two States

by Shanna Hatfield

The unexpected paths I traverse in the name of research for my books never ceases to amaze me.

Recently, I was digging out a stack of books to begin diving into details for my next sweet historical romance when I unearthed an old book I purchased a few years ago at a used book fundraiser.

As I flipped through it, a photo caught my eye.

TOWN OF DENIO

What you see in the image is a very tiny town in Nevada (current population less than 100) named Denio. The saloon in the photo shared the building with the town's post office, which happened to be in Oregon.

The town straddles the Nevada-Oregon line on what is now Highway 292. The post office still exists, along with a small library, a community center, and a bar.

Back in the late 1800s and early 1900s, many towns popped up in boom-or-bust pursuits, such as mining. Denio was one such town.

Aaron Denio moved to the area in 1885. He was born in 1824 in Illinois and traveled to California in 1860. He worked in milling, farming, and mining. After spending time in Nevada and Idaho at places like Humboldt and Silver City, he realized the need for beef and bread to keep the miners alive and going.

He brought his family to what would become Denio and settled them into a little sod and mud hut he built then began to farm and mine. He opened a station for travels to stop. The post office was established on the Oregon side of the town in 1888 and Denio was the postmaster.

Following WWII, a number of businesses relocated south of the state line to take advantage of Nevada's lack of income tax and more liberal laws in regard to questionable enterprises such as liquor, gambling, and brothels. Eventually, the post office followed, moving to the Nevada side of the line in 1950.

Today, visitors to the area who enjoy a variety of outdoor recreation opportunities like camping, hunting, fishing, hiking, visiting a wildlife refuge, or soaking in the hot springs. It's also a great playground for rock hounds.

The geology of the area was produced by fault uplift, volcanic magma movements, and an ancient inland sea. It's been said the hills are full of opals.

The black fire opal, the official gemstone of Nevada, is found here, too.


The Royal Peacock Opal Mine, owned and operated by the Wilson family since 1944 just south of Denio, is open to the public for pay-to-dig exploration and gem hunting.

What about you? Do you know of any little towns that straddle a state line? 


USA Today bestselling author Shanna Hatfield is a farm girl who loves to write. Her sweet historical and contemporary romances are filled with sarcasm, humor, hope, and hunky heroes. When Shanna isn’t dreaming up unforgettable characters, twisting plots, or covertly seeking dark, decadent chocolate, she hangs out with her beloved husband, Captain Cavedweller.
Shanna loves to hear from readers. Follow her online at:
Find Shanna’s books at: