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Ulmus glabra 'Camperdownii'

The Wych Elm cultivar Ulmus glabra 'Camperdownii', commonly known as the Camperdown Elm, was discovered about 1835–1840 (often mis-stated as '1640') as a young contorted elm (a sport) growing in the forest at Camperdown House, in Dundee, Scotland, by the Earl of Camperdown's head forester, David Taylor. The young tree was lifted and replanted within the gardens of Camperdown House where it remains to this day. The original tree, which grows on its own roots, is less than 3 m tall, with a weeping habit and contorted branch structure. The earl's gardener is said to have produced the first of what are commonly recognised as Camperdown elms by grafting a cutting to the trunk of a wych elm (U. glabra).

Ulmus glabra 'Camperdownii'
Camperdown Elm, Prospect Park (Brooklyn)
SpeciesUlmus glabra
Cultivar'Camperdownii'
OriginScotland
The original Camperdown Elm, replanted near the location of its discovery c.1840 in Camperdown Park, Dundee; image taken in 1989

Henry and Bean record that in early days both 'Camperdownii' and a reportedly similar-looking cultivar called 'Serpentina' were marketed as U. montana pendula nova.[1][2] Koch had listed an U. serpentina in 1872,[3] and an U. montana serpentina was marketed in the late 19th century and early 20th by the Späth nursery in Berlin,[4] and by the Ulrich nursery in Warsaw.[5] In Späth catalogues between 1902 and 1920, 'Serpentina' appears while 'Camperdownii' is absent; by 1930 'Camperdownii' appears but 'Serpentina' is absent. This suggests that 'Serpentina' may have been a continental name for 'Camperdownii', and that Späth dropped the name 'Serpentina' c.1930 in favour of 'Camperdownii'. Elwes and Henry's failure to mention the serpentining branches of 'Camperdownii' may have contributed to the impression of two different trees. In this omission they were followed by Bean (1925; corrected 1981),[2] Green (1964), Hillier (1972– 2002),[6] Krüssmann (1976),[7] and White (2003),[8] the first four of whom, like Elwes and Henry, list 'Serpentina' as a cultivar distinct from 'Camperdownii'.

Although usually classed as a cultivar of wych elm,[9] the tree was considered a nothomorph of Ulmus × hollandica 'Vegeta' by Green (1964).[10]

The tree is sometimes confused with the 'Horizontalis' (Weeping Wych Elm) owing to both being given the epithet 'Pendula'.[10]

Description edit

The grafted Camperdown Elm slowly develops a broad, flat head that may eventually build as high as 4 m (13 feet), and a commensurately wide crown with a weeping habit.[8] Its chief diagnostic feature is its contorted branching, what Mitchell (1982) called the "head of furiously twisting branches".[11]

The ultimate size and form of 'Camperdownii' depends on such factors as latitude and location, on what part of the parent tree the cuttings come from, on the 'stock' on which it is grafted, and on possible continuing mutation. Specimens may therefore vary in appearance.[12] Grown in lower latitudes like Victoria, Australia, the tree can attain a height and spread of over 13 m.[13][14]

Pests and diseases edit

'Camperdownii' is susceptible to Dutch elm disease, however, there are still many examples to be found in parks and gardens across the British Isles as it often avoids detection by the Scolytae beetle (a major vector of Dutch elm disease) because of its diminutive height. In North America it often escapes infection possibly because the American vectors of the disease do not feed on wych elm,[citation needed] however, its leaves are heavily damaged there by the elm leaf beetle Xanthogaleruca luteola,[15] elm yellows [2], and disfigured by leaf-mining and leaf-rolling insects, such as the elm casebearer, Coleophora ulmifoliella [3].

Cultivation edit

Every 'Camperdownii' is descended (through cuttings) from the original sport and usually grafted on a wych elm trunk.[16] Other grafting stock has been used, including Dutch elm U. × hollandica, Siberian elm U. pumila, and English elm U. minor 'Atinia' (although this ultimately produces suckers).

Camperdown elms satisfied a mid-Victorian passion for curiosities in the 'Gardenesque' gardens then in vogue. Many examples were planted, as 'rarities', in Britain and America. There are many on university campuses, often planted as memorials, such as at the campus of the University of Idaho. Others featured in townscapes such as at the Lakeview Cemetery, Seattle, and Kripalu Yoga Center, Stockbridge, MA. [citation needed]

The tree was also introduced to Australia, where a number still survive, notably in Victoria, where it was marketed from 1873.[17][18]

Camperdown Elm is cold hardy, suffering more from summer drought than winter cold (to zone 4), although 90% of the University of Minnesota elm trials specimens were lost during the exceptionally severe winter of 2002–2003.[19]

Notable trees edit

In Dundee, Scotland, there are two well established Camperdownii Elms at the gated entrance to a private residence on Constitution Terrace in the Crescents Conservation Area. Both trees have grown so they intertwine with each other and create the illusion of one tree in the summer months. The trees are likely to have been cultivated around 1850, the same age as the Victorian mansion situated in the grounds which was built around 1850, therefore are among the oldest in Dundee. These trees are the only known 'twin trees' of their kind.[21][22]

In Prospect Park, Brooklyn, a Camperdown Elm planted in 1872 near the Boat House has developed into a picturesque weatherbeaten specimen, no more than four metres high, like an oversized bonsai. Described by the poet Marianne Moore as "our crowning curio," the Prospect Park tree is considered the outstanding specimen tree in the park.[23] Halifax Public Gardens contains a similar specimen, located next to the Boer War Memorial fountain, which displays the same characteristics as the Prospect Park tree.

The UK TROBI Champion trees are in Scotland, at Baxters Park, Dundee, and at Ayr Cemetery.[24] In France, two grow by the gate at corner of rue de Buzenval and rue de Lagney in the Square Sarah Bernhardt, Paris (20th Arrondissement). NB: Two Corkscrew Willows at the entrance near the corner of rue de Lagny & rue Mounet Sully look the same during winter.

In Gardner, Massachusetts, there is a Camperdown Elm on Parker Street in the front yard of a former store now currently a private residence, towering over the peak of the two-story building with a trunk circumference of over 9 feet. The tree has not been touched for decades and is infested with leaf miners and borers; there is also a significant amount of trunk rot and large missing limbs. As of late June 2010, a local resident, Nate Thibault, has taken action to create a restoration plan for the tree. The tree's age is undetermined but believed to have reached its maturity. [UPDATE: The new owner of this property has unfortunately failed to recognize the historical significance of this tree and had it completely removed!]

There is a Camperdown Elm on the Smith College campus which was planted as part of an arboretum by Frederick Law Olmsted at the turn of the 20th century.

The Post University campus in Waterbury, Connecticut, hosts a Camperdown Elm, which once served as the backdrop for the university's logo.[25]

In Warrenton, Oregon there is a Camperdown Elm on the property of the DK Warren House. This is actually 2 trees that have intertwined together for a spectacular canopy. www.dkwarrenhouse.com, Circa. 1885

In Port Gamble, Washington there is a Camperdown Elm next to the historic Walker-Ames House. Planted in 1875, this individual measures 20 feet tall, with a 26-foot crown and 7-foot trunk circumference.

In Kingston, Washington there is a Camperdown Elm on an old homestead that is now the community center called The Village Green. It was planted in 1885, it measures 20 feet tall, with a 28-foot crown and 7 foot trunk circumference.

In Alfred, NY the “Umbrella Tree” is a beloved landmark on the Alfred University campus. Frequently it's a temporary home to students nestled in its branches or artwork hanging from its limbs. Found in front of the Powell Campus Center it was planted circa 1905. Originally it sat in front of Kenyon Memorial Hall, the first building on this site. It once had a “twin” located just a few yards away that was removed in 1974 due to ill health. A third one was once located next to the School of Theology building (The Gothic), currently the site of Herrick Memorial Library.[26]

In Saint John, New Brunswick, there is a Camperdown Elm on Red Head Road on the front yard of a former farm, currently a private residence. The owner is currently trying to locate the tree's history; its age is undetermined.

In Leamington, Ontario, there is a mature Camperdown Elm on Seacliff Drive in the back yard of a garden center.

In Eastport, Maine, there is a Camperdown Elm at the corner of High Street and Shackford Street. The tree is on the corner near the original Anderson home built circa the 1850s. It is 3 feet in diameter at the widest part of its trunk. Eastport is the easternmost city in the United States.

In Spiers Old School Grounds near Beith, Scotland is a fine specimen dating from the late 1880s planted by the Earl of Eglinton's head gardener on behalf of the Spier's Trust (see photograph).

In Newport, Rhode Island, there is a Camperdown Elm at the Chinese Tea House in the Marble House estate, a historic mansion built by Mr. and Mrs. William Kissam Vanderbilt between 1888 and 1892, which is open to the public.

In Cazenovia, New York, there is a Camperdown Elm planted in the gardens of The Brewster Inn.

Two large trees are situated outside 315 Eureka Street, Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, (2014), planted c.1900. Measured in 2011, one (girth 2.7 m) was 13.7 m tall and 14.3 m broad, the other (girth 2.6 m) 13 m tall and 13 m broad.[13]

The largest recorded specimens are located in New Zealand. The cultivar was popular with early settlers and there are several trees with girth measurements over 2.8 metres listed on the New Zealand Tree Register. The largest tree, situated at 8 Harakeke Street, Christchurch has a girth of 3.5 m, is 9.6 m high and has an average canopy spread of 11.4 m (2016).[27]

Synonymy edit

  • Ulmus glabra 'Camperdownii'
  • Ulmus montana (: glabra) var. pendula: Kirchner[4], in Petzold[5] & Kirchner, Arboretum Muscaviense, 565, 1864.
  • Ulmus montana (: glabra) var. pendula camperdownii Hort.: Henry, in Henry & Elwes, Trees of Great Britain & Ireland, 7: 1867, 1913.
  • Ulmus montana (: glabra) pendula nova Hort.: Kirchner, in Petzold & Kirchner, Arboretum Muscaviense 565, 1864, name in synonymy.
  • Ulmus scampstoniensis pendula: Petzold, in Petzold & Kirchner, Arboretum Muscaviense 565, 1864.

Accessions edit

North America edit

Europe edit

Australasia edit

Nurseries edit

North America edit

(Widely available)

Europe edit

(Widely available)

References edit

  1. ^ Elwes, Henry John; Henry, Augustine (1913). The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. Vol. 7. p. 1884.
  2. ^ a b Bean, W. J. (1981). Trees and shrubs hardy in Great Britain, 7th edition. Murray, England, p.646
  3. ^ Koch, Karl (1872). Dendrologie; Bäume, Sträucher und Halbsträucher, welche in Mittel- und Nord- Europa im Freien kultivirt werden. Vol. 2. p. 417.
  4. ^ Katalog (PDF). Vol. 108. Berlin, Germany: L. Späth Baumschulenweg. 1902–1903. pp. 132–133.
  5. ^ Ulrich, C. (1894), Katalog Drzew i Krezewow, C. Ulrich, Rok 1893-94, Warszawa
  6. ^ The Hillier manual of trees & shrubs. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. 2002. ISBN 978-0-7153-1073-1.
  7. ^ Krüssman, Gerd, Manual of Cultivated Broad-Leaved Trees & Shrubs (1976, trans 1984 vol. 3)
  8. ^ a b More, David; White, John (2003). Cassell's trees of Britain & Northern Europe. London: Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-36192-2.
  9. ^ Coleman, Max (2009). Wych Elm. Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh. ISBN 978-1-906129-21-7.
  10. ^ a b Green, Peter Shaw (1964). "Registration of cultivar names in Ulmus". Arnoldia. 24 (6–8). Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University: 41–80. Retrieved 16 February 2017.
  11. ^ Mitchell, Alan (1982). The trees of Britain and Northern Europe. London: Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-219037-4.
  12. ^ Information from RBGE.
  13. ^ a b 315 Eureka Street 'Camperdownii', Ballarat, Victoria [1]; trees may also be seen on Google Streetview
  14. ^ Phillips, Roger (1978). Trees in Britain, Europe and North America. London: Pan Books. ISBN 978-0-330-25480-9.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  16. ^ "Pine Tree Cemetery's Camperdown Elms". corunna-mi.gov. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  17. ^ Brookes, Margaret, & Barley, Richard, Plants listed in nursery catalogues in Victoria, 1855-1889 (Ornamental Plant Collection Association, South Yarra, Victoria, 1992), p.303–304
  18. ^ 'Camperdownii in Victoria
  19. ^ Giblin, C. P. & Gillman, J. H. (2006). Elms for the Twin Cities: A Guide for Selection and Maintenance. University of Minnesota.
  20. ^ Ellwanger and Barry cat. 1899, p.62, has a second photo
  21. ^ Dundee City Council. "Dundee's Tree & Woodland Heritage" (PDF). dundeecity.gov.uk. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  22. ^ Dundee City Council. "Crescents Conservation Area Appraisal" (PDF). dundeecity.gov.uk. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  23. ^ Moore, Marianne (1994). "The Camperdown Elm". Complete poems. New York: Macmillan Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-018851-6.
  24. ^ Johnson, O. (2011). Champion Trees of Britain & Ireland, p. 168. Kew Publishing, Kew, London. ISBN 9781842464526.
  25. ^ "225718". Connecticut's Notable Trees. Connecticut College. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
  26. ^ "The Umbrella Tree". Alfred University Archives Blog. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  27. ^ "Tree Information". The Zealand Tree Register. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  28. ^ Prince Edward Island Camperdown Elm, summer, flickr.com

External links edit

  • TreeFest Scotland (with photo)
  • Portland urban trees (with photo)
  • Camperdown Elm
  • Camperdown Elm in Corunna, Michigan's Pine Tree Cemetery (with photo)
  • Camperdown Elm pictures, Michigan State University Plant Encyclopedia

ulmus, glabra, camperdownii, wych, cultivar, commonly, known, camperdown, discovered, about, 1835, 1840, often, stated, 1640, young, contorted, sport, growing, forest, camperdown, house, dundee, scotland, earl, camperdown, head, forester, david, taylor, young,. The Wych Elm cultivar Ulmus glabra Camperdownii commonly known as the Camperdown Elm was discovered about 1835 1840 often mis stated as 1640 as a young contorted elm a sport growing in the forest at Camperdown House in Dundee Scotland by the Earl of Camperdown s head forester David Taylor The young tree was lifted and replanted within the gardens of Camperdown House where it remains to this day The original tree which grows on its own roots is less than 3 m tall with a weeping habit and contorted branch structure The earl s gardener is said to have produced the first of what are commonly recognised as Camperdown elms by grafting a cutting to the trunk of a wych elm U glabra Ulmus glabra Camperdownii Camperdown Elm Prospect Park Brooklyn SpeciesUlmus glabraCultivar Camperdownii OriginScotlandThe original Camperdown Elm replanted near the location of its discovery c 1840 in Camperdown Park Dundee image taken in 1989Henry and Bean record that in early days both Camperdownii and a reportedly similar looking cultivar called Serpentina were marketed as U montana pendula nova 1 2 Koch had listed an U serpentina in 1872 3 and an U montana serpentina was marketed in the late 19th century and early 20th by the Spath nursery in Berlin 4 and by the Ulrich nursery in Warsaw 5 In Spath catalogues between 1902 and 1920 Serpentina appears while Camperdownii is absent by 1930 Camperdownii appears but Serpentina is absent This suggests that Serpentina may have been a continental name for Camperdownii and that Spath dropped the name Serpentina c 1930 in favour of Camperdownii Elwes and Henry s failure to mention the serpentining branches of Camperdownii may have contributed to the impression of two different trees In this omission they were followed by Bean 1925 corrected 1981 2 Green 1964 Hillier 1972 2002 6 Krussmann 1976 7 and White 2003 8 the first four of whom like Elwes and Henry list Serpentina as a cultivar distinct from Camperdownii Although usually classed as a cultivar of wych elm 9 the tree was considered a nothomorph of Ulmus hollandica Vegeta by Green 1964 10 The tree is sometimes confused with the Horizontalis Weeping Wych Elm owing to both being given the epithet Pendula 10 Contents 1 Description 2 Pests and diseases 3 Cultivation 4 Notable trees 5 Synonymy 6 Accessions 6 1 North America 6 2 Europe 6 3 Australasia 7 Nurseries 7 1 North America 7 2 Europe 8 References 9 External linksDescription editThe grafted Camperdown Elm slowly develops a broad flat head that may eventually build as high as 4 m 13 feet and a commensurately wide crown with a weeping habit 8 Its chief diagnostic feature is its contorted branching what Mitchell 1982 called the head of furiously twisting branches 11 The ultimate size and form of Camperdownii depends on such factors as latitude and location on what part of the parent tree the cuttings come from on the stock on which it is grafted and on possible continuing mutation Specimens may therefore vary in appearance 12 Grown in lower latitudes like Victoria Australia the tree can attain a height and spread of over 13 m 13 14 nbsp Distinctive narrow Camperdown samarae showing the seed on the stalk side of centre typical of wych nbsp Camperdown samarae on pendulous branchlets nbsp Dried short shoot Camperdownii leaves August nbsp Camperdown Elm grafted on Siberian elm stock Serbia nbsp Extreme contortion in the trunk and branches of Camperdown Elm Port Gamble WashingtonPests and diseases edit Camperdownii is susceptible to Dutch elm disease however there are still many examples to be found in parks and gardens across the British Isles as it often avoids detection by the Scolytae beetle a major vector of Dutch elm disease because of its diminutive height In North America it often escapes infection possibly because the American vectors of the disease do not feed on wych elm citation needed however its leaves are heavily damaged there by the elm leaf beetle Xanthogaleruca luteola 15 elm yellows 2 and disfigured by leaf mining and leaf rolling insects such as the elm casebearer Coleophora ulmifoliella 3 nbsp A Camperdown Elm at Spier s parklands that is infected with Rigidoporous ulmarius nbsp Slime flux on Camperdown ElmCultivation editEvery Camperdownii is descended through cuttings from the original sport and usually grafted on a wych elm trunk 16 Other grafting stock has been used including Dutch elm U hollandica Siberian elm U pumila and English elm U minor Atinia although this ultimately produces suckers Camperdown elms satisfied a mid Victorian passion for curiosities in the Gardenesque gardens then in vogue Many examples were planted as rarities in Britain and America There are many on university campuses often planted as memorials such as at the campus of the University of Idaho Others featured in townscapes such as at the Lakeview Cemetery Seattle and Kripalu Yoga Center Stockbridge MA citation needed The tree was also introduced to Australia where a number still survive notably in Victoria where it was marketed from 1873 17 18 Camperdown Elm is cold hardy suffering more from summer drought than winter cold to zone 4 although 90 of the University of Minnesota elm trials specimens were lost during the exceptionally severe winter of 2002 2003 19 nbsp Camperdown fruiting Eisenhower Park Newport Rhode Island nbsp Camperdown Elm 1891 from Ellwanger and Barry s catalogue New York 20 nbsp Young Camperdown elms grafted on Siberian elm stock Saints Cyril and Methodius Park Belgrade nbsp Camperdown in autumn Royal Botanical Garden MadridNotable trees editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Dundee Scotland there are two well established Camperdownii Elms at the gated entrance to a private residence on Constitution Terrace in the Crescents Conservation Area Both trees have grown so they intertwine with each other and create the illusion of one tree in the summer months The trees are likely to have been cultivated around 1850 the same age as the Victorian mansion situated in the grounds which was built around 1850 therefore are among the oldest in Dundee These trees are the only known twin trees of their kind 21 22 In Prospect Park Brooklyn a Camperdown Elm planted in 1872 near the Boat House has developed into a picturesque weatherbeaten specimen no more than four metres high like an oversized bonsai Described by the poet Marianne Moore as our crowning curio the Prospect Park tree is considered the outstanding specimen tree in the park 23 Halifax Public Gardens contains a similar specimen located next to the Boer War Memorial fountain which displays the same characteristics as the Prospect Park tree The UK TROBI Champion trees are in Scotland at Baxters Park Dundee and at Ayr Cemetery 24 In France two grow by the gate at corner of rue de Buzenval and rue de Lagney in the Square Sarah Bernhardt Paris 20th Arrondissement NB Two Corkscrew Willows at the entrance near the corner of rue de Lagny amp rue Mounet Sully look the same during winter In Gardner Massachusetts there is a Camperdown Elm on Parker Street in the front yard of a former store now currently a private residence towering over the peak of the two story building with a trunk circumference of over 9 feet The tree has not been touched for decades and is infested with leaf miners and borers there is also a significant amount of trunk rot and large missing limbs As of late June 2010 a local resident Nate Thibault has taken action to create a restoration plan for the tree The tree s age is undetermined but believed to have reached its maturity UPDATE The new owner of this property has unfortunately failed to recognize the historical significance of this tree and had it completely removed There is a Camperdown Elm on the Smith College campus which was planted as part of an arboretum by Frederick Law Olmsted at the turn of the 20th century The Post University campus in Waterbury Connecticut hosts a Camperdown Elm which once served as the backdrop for the university s logo 25 In Warrenton Oregon there is a Camperdown Elm on the property of the DK Warren House This is actually 2 trees that have intertwined together for a spectacular canopy www dkwarrenhouse com Circa 1885In Port Gamble Washington there is a Camperdown Elm next to the historic Walker Ames House Planted in 1875 this individual measures 20 feet tall with a 26 foot crown and 7 foot trunk circumference In Kingston Washington there is a Camperdown Elm on an old homestead that is now the community center called The Village Green It was planted in 1885 it measures 20 feet tall with a 28 foot crown and 7 foot trunk circumference In Alfred NY the Umbrella Tree is a beloved landmark on the Alfred University campus Frequently it s a temporary home to students nestled in its branches or artwork hanging from its limbs Found in front of the Powell Campus Center it was planted circa 1905 Originally it sat in front of Kenyon Memorial Hall the first building on this site It once had a twin located just a few yards away that was removed in 1974 due to ill health A third one was once located next to the School of Theology building The Gothic currently the site of Herrick Memorial Library 26 In Saint John New Brunswick there is a Camperdown Elm on Red Head Road on the front yard of a former farm currently a private residence The owner is currently trying to locate the tree s history its age is undetermined In Leamington Ontario there is a mature Camperdown Elm on Seacliff Drive in the back yard of a garden center In Eastport Maine there is a Camperdown Elm at the corner of High Street and Shackford Street The tree is on the corner near the original Anderson home built circa the 1850s It is 3 feet in diameter at the widest part of its trunk Eastport is the easternmost city in the United States In Spiers Old School Grounds near Beith Scotland is a fine specimen dating from the late 1880s planted by the Earl of Eglinton s head gardener on behalf of the Spier s Trust see photograph In Newport Rhode Island there is a Camperdown Elm at the Chinese Tea House in the Marble House estate a historic mansion built by Mr and Mrs William Kissam Vanderbilt between 1888 and 1892 which is open to the public In Cazenovia New York there is a Camperdown Elm planted in the gardens of The Brewster Inn Two large trees are situated outside 315 Eureka Street Ballarat Victoria Australia 2014 planted c 1900 Measured in 2011 one girth 2 7 m was 13 7 m tall and 14 3 m broad the other girth 2 6 m 13 m tall and 13 m broad 13 The largest recorded specimens are located in New Zealand The cultivar was popular with early settlers and there are several trees with girth measurements over 2 8 metres listed on the New Zealand Tree Register The largest tree situated at 8 Harakeke Street Christchurch has a girth of 3 5 m is 9 6 m high and has an average canopy spread of 11 4 m 2016 27 nbsp Weeping Elm Halifax Public Gardens nbsp Unmaintained Camperdown Elm Gardner MA 01440 nbsp A Camperdown Elm located in Port Gamble Washington Planted 1875 nbsp Parc du Bois de Coulonge Quebec City nbsp Red Head Road Saint John NB nbsp Prospect Park s elm in winter showing its distinctive qualities nbsp Camperdown Elm Seacliff Drive Leamington Ontario Canada nbsp Open branched Camperdown Elm Prince Edward Island Canada 28 nbsp Camperdown Elm in Prospect Park Brooklyn US in early spring nbsp Camperdown Elm at Post University in Waterbury ConnecticutSynonymy editUlmus glabra Camperdownii Ulmus montana glabra var pendula Kirchner 4 in Petzold 5 amp Kirchner Arboretum Muscaviense 565 1864 Ulmus montana glabra var pendula camperdownii Hort Henry in Henry amp Elwes Trees of Great Britain amp Ireland 7 1867 1913 Ulmus montana glabra pendula nova Hort Kirchner in Petzold amp Kirchner Arboretum Muscaviense 565 1864 name in synonymy Ulmus scampstoniensis pendula Petzold in Petzold amp Kirchner Arboretum Muscaviense 565 1864 Accessions editNorth America edit Arnold Arboretum US Acc no 352 51 Bartlett Tree Experts 6 US Acc nos 1375 2002 221 Brooklyn Botanic Garden 7 New York US Acc no 240001 Chicago Botanic Garden Glencoe Illinois US One tree in the Parking Lots listed as U vegeta Camperdownii Dominion Arboretum Ottawa Ontario Canada No acc details available Detroit Institute of Art Detroit Michigan US 2 Specimens frame the entranceway Eisenhower Park Newport Rhode Island US Filoli Estate amp Gardens Woodside California US No acc details available Gilman Park Arboretum 8 Pierce Nebraska US No acc details available Grounds for Sculpture Hamilton New Jersey US One specimen in the Water Garden to the left of the sculpture Relative Hoyt Arboretum Portland Oregon US No acc details available Longwood Gardens US Acc no 2000 1338 New York Botanical Garden US Acc no 529 89 Scott Arboretum US Acc no 70 163 Smith College US Acc no 3166PA University of Idaho Moscow Idaho US Washington Park Arboretum Seattle US No acc details available Port Gamble Washington US Bloedel Reserve Bainbridge Island Washington US Two specimens facing the Salish Sea behind the main Residence Europe edit Arboretum de La Petite Loiterie 9 Monthodon France No details available Brighton amp Hove UK National Elm Collection Scattered throughout the city Recent additions have occurred at Withdean and Preston Parks Cambridge Botanic Garden 10 University of Cambridge UK No accession details available Grange Farm Arboretum Lincolnshire UK Acc no 512 Hortus Botanicus Nationalis Salaspils Latvia Acc no 18099 Linnaean Gardens of Uppsala Sweden Acc no 1976 1049 Newby Hall and Gardens near Ripon North Yorkshire UK Two examples No planting dates available Tallinn Botanic Garden Estonia 11 No accession details available Westonbirt Arboretum 12 Tetbury Glos UK No planting date or acc no available Wijdemeren City Council Netherlands Elm collection 2 exx 4 m high at cemeteries Rading Loosdrecht and Hornhof Nederhorst den Berg Planted in 2015 Balintore Highlands Scotland On private land visible on google streetview 57 760339 3 900778Australasia edit Eastwoodhill Arboretum 13 Gisborne New Zealand 3 trees details not known Morton House Charles Street Launceston Australia 1 tree Orange Botanic Gardens Orange New South Wales Australia 1 tree Nurseries editNorth America edit Widely available Europe edit Widely available References edit Elwes Henry John Henry Augustine 1913 The Trees of Great Britain amp Ireland Vol 7 p 1884 a b Bean W J 1981 Trees and shrubs hardy in Great Britain 7th edition Murray England p 646 Koch Karl 1872 Dendrologie Baume Straucher und Halbstraucher welche in Mittel und Nord Europa im Freien kultivirt werden Vol 2 p 417 Katalog PDF Vol 108 Berlin Germany L Spath Baumschulenweg 1902 1903 pp 132 133 Ulrich C 1894 Katalog Drzew i Krezewow C Ulrich Rok 1893 94 Warszawa The Hillier manual of trees amp shrubs Newton Abbot David amp Charles 2002 ISBN 978 0 7153 1073 1 Krussman Gerd Manual of Cultivated Broad Leaved Trees amp Shrubs 1976 trans 1984 vol 3 a b More David White John 2003 Cassell s trees of Britain amp Northern Europe London Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 36192 2 Coleman Max 2009 Wych Elm Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh ISBN 978 1 906129 21 7 a b Green Peter Shaw 1964 Registration of cultivar names in Ulmus Arnoldia 24 6 8 Arnold Arboretum Harvard University 41 80 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Mitchell Alan 1982 The trees of Britain and Northern Europe London Collins ISBN 978 0 00 219037 4 Information from RBGE a b 315 Eureka Street Camperdownii Ballarat Victoria 1 trees may also be seen on Google Streetview Phillips Roger 1978 Trees in Britain Europe and North America London Pan Books ISBN 978 0 330 25480 9 Elm Leaf Beetle Survey Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 17 July 2017 Pine Tree Cemetery s Camperdown Elms corunna mi gov Retrieved 24 August 2017 Brookes Margaret amp Barley Richard Plants listed in nursery catalogues in Victoria 1855 1889 Ornamental Plant Collection Association South Yarra Victoria 1992 p 303 304 Camperdowniiin Victoria Giblin C P amp Gillman J H 2006 Elms for the Twin Cities A Guide for Selection and Maintenance University of Minnesota Ellwanger and Barry cat 1899 p 62 has a second photo Dundee City Council Dundee s Tree amp Woodland Heritage PDF dundeecity gov uk Retrieved 24 August 2017 Dundee City Council Crescents Conservation Area Appraisal PDF dundeecity gov uk Retrieved 24 August 2017 Moore Marianne 1994 The Camperdown Elm Complete poems New York Macmillan Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 018851 6 Johnson O 2011 Champion Trees of Britain amp Ireland p 168 Kew Publishing Kew London ISBN 9781842464526 225718 Connecticut s Notable Trees Connecticut College Retrieved 11 February 2024 The Umbrella Tree Alfred University Archives Blog Retrieved 24 August 2017 Tree Information The Zealand Tree Register Retrieved 17 July 2022 Prince Edward Island Camperdown Elm summer flickr comExternal links editTreeFest Scotland with photo Portland urban trees with photo Camperdown Elm Camperdown Elm in Corunna Michigan s Pine Tree Cemetery with photo Camperdown Elm pictures Michigan State University Plant Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ulmus glabra 27Camperdownii 27 amp oldid 1206157480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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