I have read sources that speculated that "Neches" and "Natchez" are actually the same word. There was a town in Texas many years ago that was referred to as "Natchez on the Neches (River)". The name Natchez was, I believe, derived from the Natchez Indians of the Southeast United States, a tribe peripherally related to the Aztecs and other Mesoamerican tribes. One of the earliest trails through the South was known as the "Natchez Trace". I suspect that, given the evidence of the "Yellow Neches" fig in Jamestown, VA, that the fig was carried by settlers to Texas from Virginia or points west. The fig may have been grown on the Neches River or may have been brought via the Natchez Trace. The origin of the name may be lost to the mists of time. At any rate, it is good to know that the "Yellow Neches" may have potential as a "gourmet" fig. The taste and performance of figs are notoriously capricious, subject to the vagaries of climate and soil. To those of us for whom taste is more important than commercial potential (size and number of crops), the opinions of an authority such as Condit are important and certainly to be considered. However, from reading his work, I believe that for him, the commercial potential of a fig had a higher priority than the taste of the fig alone. I do not have "Yellow Neches" in my collection, but I will give it a try!