Brandywine

Etymology 1
Not known with certainty; so named since the 17th century; several long-held hypotheses exist, including a story of casks of that were spilled in the river's mouth in the colonial era, a fancied resemblance of the turbid water's color to that of brandywine, and an early Euro-American settler whose surname was similar to  or.

Proper noun

 * 1) A stream in Pennsylvania and Delaware (variously called the Brandywine Creek, the Brandywine River, and often just the Brandywine).

Etymology 2
Unknown; the plant variety has been traced back far into the 19th century by seed savers, but the origin of its name is lost; speculations include the possibility that the fruit's color was likened to that of, or that the variety was bred in the Brandywine Valley.

Noun

 * 1) An heirloom cultivar of tomato with large potato-leaved foliage and large pink fruit.