PINEAPPLES – A SHORT BUT FRUITY HISTORY (Mk 2)
NOTE The original post more than a year ago was intended in part as a celebration of passing the 50,000 hits mark. As I said then, “…so much interest in the wildlife of one small island? Thanks to all those who have visited during the last year or so”. Now we are speeding towards 125,000. In that time, the readership has increased somewhat (I thank you both…). So I am rolling this one out again with a few revisions, because it went down quite well before, at least with Pinaphiles…
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The first image below is of the handsome locally hand-carved pineapple that surmounts the roof of the DELPHI CLUB Abaco. The fruit lost a few leaves in Hurricane Irene, which scored a direct hit on the Club. As posted on the ABACO FACTS page (under RANDOM main menu) “the precise Longitude & Latitude coordinates of the Pineapple [on] the Delphi Club roof are respectively –77.1787834167480 & 26.20450323936187 “. But why is it there? Time for a Short Voyage around the Pineapple…
PINEAPPLE FACTS TO ENLIVEN YOUR CONVERSATION
HISTORICAL & SOCIAL CONTEXT
- Brought back to Europe by Christopher Columbus in 1493 on his return from his second voyage
- Taken on long voyages as a protection against scurvy and because of its long life
- By the c17 royalty & aristocracy grew them in hot-houses (or rather, their gardeners did). King Charles II tried one, an event so important it was recorded by the Court painter Hendrik Danckerts
- By c18 considered a great delicacy and a status symbol of wealth, often the centre-piece of a feast.
- If you couldn’t afford to buy one, you could rent one and return it afterwards. Someone richer than you would then buy it.
- Pineapples were grown in pits of fermenting manure. In England Queen Victoria was not amused and soon put an end to that unpleasant nonsense
- In the c19 pineapples were one of the most significant exports from Abaco
- The Earl of Dunmore built a huge pineapple folly in Scotland in 1761, which you can stay in (We have. It’s a lot of fun)
- On ‘Unter den Linden’ in Berlin, the cast iron posts round the huge equestrian statue of Frederick the Great are topped by pineapples.
CULTURAL SYMBOLISM
- Pineapples symbolise welcome and hospitality, placed at the entrance to villages or plantations. The tradition spread to Europe where they were carved as gateposts; staircase finials; and incorporated into wooden furniture (including bedposts at the Delphi Club)
- Seafarers put pineapples outside their homes on their return to show that they were back from their travels and ‘at home’ to visitors
- An expensive fruit to grow & to transport; remained a luxury until the arrival of steamships
- Their costliness made them status symbols / indicators of wealth and rank. Displaying or serving pineapple showed that guests were honoured. And, coincidentally, that the hosts were loaded.
- In the 1920s the grandest dinners apparently needed both “a pineapple and Lady Curzon” (I have been asked whether this is Interwar Period code for some sort of disreputable activity… let’s hope the answer is ‘yes’)
- The future Queen Elizabeth was sent 500 cases of canned pineapple as a wedding present from Australia. She asked them “Hev you come far?” Prince Phillip’s reaction was – apart from the word ‘pineapple’ – unprintable
- In the play Abigail’s Party (Mike Leigh) pineapple chunks on cocktail sticks were used as a plot device to highlight the desperate social ambitions of a hellish hostess trying to impress & outclass her guests
- A 1930s ad promised that by baking a pineapple pie a wife would make her man “smack his lips in real he-man enjoyment” (NB This may not work so well in the 2010s)
By Appointment to HM the Queen
ARTS & CRAFTS
- Used on Wedgwood pottery designs as early as the 1760s; others soon followed suit
- Became widely used decoratively as a motif for gateposts, weather vanes, door lintels, wallpaper, table linen & curtains, and incorporated into furniture
- Depicted as curiosities in early botanical engravings (Commelin 1697 Hortus Botanicus)
- Featured in still life paintings as a crowning example of opulence (e.g. De Heem, Jan van Os)
- Depicted in plant and fruit studies, for example these by Johann Christoph Volckamer, very early c18
- Occasionally found in Church stained glass windows (e.g. St Lawrence’s, Jersey)
- Featured in music e.g. Pineapple Rag (Scott Joplin); Pineapple Head (Crowded House); Escape – The Piña Colada Song (Rupert Holmes); Pineapple Express (Huey Lewis); Pineapple (Sparks)
SPORT
- The Men’s Singles Trophy at Wimbledon is a silver gilt cup with a gilded pineapple on top of the lid. It used to mean “Welcome back, Roger!” Now it stands for the first British male singles win since 1937 (‘Go, Andy!’). [British women have fared rather better in the singles in that time (‘Go, Angela, Ann & Virginia!’)]
MOTORING
- Vauxhall produced the Vauxhall Astra Sport in ‘tasteful’ Pineapple yellow. For the history of the use of the far more glamorous Bahama Yellow in motoring, click HERE
10 TASTY PINEAPPLE CHUNKS
- The cocktail Afterglow is 1 part grenadine, 4 parts orange juice & 4 parts pineapple juice on ice
- Piña Colada is rum, coconut milk & crushed pineapple. Omit the rum for a Virgin Colada
- It is impossible, for chemical reasons, to make jelly with fresh pineapple
- “Pineapple heat” was once a standard marking on thermometers
- A pineapple grows as two interlocking helixes (8 one way, 13 the other – each being a Fibonacci number)
- A pineapple will never become any riper than it was when harvested
- Workers who cut up pineapples eventually have no fingerprints – a gift fact for crime writers
- Pineapple stems are being tested for anti-cancer properties
- Pine Apple, a small Alabama town full of pineapple symbols, was originally named “Friendship” but there turned out to be another town called that, so they changed it
- Features on the Bahamian 5 cents coin…
- …and a $1 stamp
Read Jim Kerr’s interesting article in ABACO LIFE on Abaco’s pineapple past HERE
FRANCESCA BEAUMAN 2006
THE PINEAPPLE – KING OF FRUITS
If you want to find out more about pineapples, their history and social significance, you should be able to pick up a copy of this book on Am@z%n, Abe or ALibris for a few dollars
“What?” I hear you cry, “you’ve managed a whole page about pineapples without mentioning modern advertising”. Shall I do so now? The man from Del Monte, he says YES
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqmpVWzH4FM]Sources: Own ideas + some magpie-thieving-borrowing from a variety of sources, many of which contain identical info and / or quote from the above book. Hope everyone is comfortable with that…
NB Not every fact above is strictly 100% true, so expect to be challenged if you try one out. In particular Prince Phillip is of course naturally docile and gentle-mouthed…
POST SCRIPT The first 21 Fibonacci numbers (just add 2 successive numbers to produce the next) are
F0 | F1 | F2 | F3 | F4 | F5 | F6 | F7 | F8 | F9 | F10 | F11 | F12 | F13 | F14 | F15 | F16 | F17 | F18 | F19 | F20 |
0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 13 | 21 | 34 | 55 | 89 | 144 | 233 | 377 | 610 | 987 | 1597 | 2584 | 4181 | 6765 |
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I very much enjoyed the pineapple info, RH, thank you.
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I’m pleased to hear that, Jet – that was another one that was fun to put together. I hope you played the hilarious ‘Man from Del Monte’ video – part of my childhood! RH
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Dear RH,
thank you very, very much for your great post about the pineapple. Although I worked most of my professional life about symbolism I learned quite a bit I didn`t know before. And the illustrations are fine, as well.
What a perfect article! It`s a pity that I cannot give 10 LIKEs 😉
Enjoy the weekend
Klausbernd
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So glad you enjoyed it! It’s strange how a single small item can generate a great deal of material – this sort of post is always fun tp research. I’ll willingly accept one like and 9 theoretical likes, of course…RH
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