species, is a hybrid, in its case of the sweet orange and pomelo. One ancestor of the grapefruit was the Jamaican sweet orange (Citrus sinensis), itself an ancient hybrid of Asian origin; the other was the Indonesian pomelo (C. maxima
). Both C. sinensis
and C. maxima'' were present in the West Indies by 1692. One story of the fruit's origin is that a 17th-century trader named 'Captain Shaddock' brought pomelo seeds to Jamaica and bred the first fruit, which were then called
shaddocks. The grapefruit then probably originated as a naturally occurring hybrid between the two plants some time after they had been introduced there. In 1814, the British naturalist and plantation owner
John Lunan published the term
grapefruit to describe a similar Jamaican citrus plant. An alternative explanation is that this name may allude to clusters of the fruit on the tree, which often appear similar to bunches of grapes. In 1830, the Jamaican version of the plant was given the botanical name
Citrus paradisi by the Scottish physician and botanist
James Macfadyen. Macfadyen identified two varieties – one called
forbidden fruit, the other
Barbadoes Grape Fruit. Macfadyen distinguished between the two plants by fruit shape with the Barbados grapefruit being piriform (
pear shaped) while the forbidden fruit was "maliformis" (
apple shaped). Macfadyen's and Hughes's descriptions differ, so it is not clear that the two reports are describing the same plant. It has been suggested that Hughes's golden orange may actually have been a grapefruit, while his forbidden fruit was a different variety that may since have been lost. It was brought to Florida by the French businessman Count
Odet Philippe in 1823, in what is now known as
Safety Harbor. An early pioneer in the American citrus industry was Kimball C. Atwood, a wealthy entrepreneur who founded the Atwood Grapefruit Company in the late 19th century. The Atwood Grove became the largest grapefruit grove in the world, with a yearly output of 80,000 boxes of fruit. There, pink grapefruit was discovered in 1906. == See also ==