Cranberries, blueberries, and Concord grapes are the only commercially grown fruits native to North America. Native Americans used all three extensively for food, medicine, and dye.
Commercial growing of cranberries began in 1816 in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Today, Massachusetts is the second-largest producer of cranberries in the U.S. Cranberries are the state’s biggest food crop as well as the official state berry.
But they aren’t just a New England crop. Around 1860, a man named Edward Sackett traveled from New York to Wisconsin to inspect land. He found 700 acres of wild cranberry vines, cultivated the marshes, and sold his cranberries in Chicago for $15 a barrel. (A barrel sells for about $45 today.) Sackett’s legacy lives on: Today, Wisconsin is the top producer of cranberries in the world!