Scuppernong Table Wine The name comes from the
Scuppernong River in
North Carolina mainly along the coastal plain. It was first mentioned as a "white grape" in a written logbook by the
Florentine explorer
Giovanni de Verrazzano while exploring the
Cape Fear River Valley in 1524. He wrote of "...[m]any vines growing naturally there...".
Sir Walter Raleigh's explorers, the captains
Philip Amadas and
Arthur Barlowe, wrote in 1584 that North Carolina's coast was "...so full of grapes as the very beating and surge of the sea overflowed them...in all the world, the like abundance is not to be found." He may have been referring to
Sargasso seaweed from coral reefs, which can be seen washed up on shore after a major storm off the North Carolina coast. The seaweed has berrylike gas-filled bladders looking much like grapes to keep the fronds afloat. However, in 1585, Governor
Ralph Lane, when describing North Carolina to Raleigh, stated: "We have discovered the main to be the goodliest soil under the cope of heaven, so abounding with sweet trees that bring rich and pleasant, grapes of such greatness, yet wild, as France, Spain, nor Italy hath no greater...". The Scuppernong grape was first cultivated during the 17th century, particularly in
Tyrell County, North Carolina. Isaac Alexander found it while hunting along the banks of a stream feeding into
Scuppernong Lake in 1755; it is mentioned in the North Carolina official state toast. The name itself traces back to the
Algonquian word
ascopo, meaning "sweet bay tree". ==Cultivation==