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Ulmus minor 'Stricta'

The field elm cultivar Ulmus minor 'Stricta', known as Cornish elm, was commonly found in South West England (Cornwall and West Devon), Brittany, and south-west Ireland,[1] until the arrival of Dutch elm disease in the late 1960s. The origin of Cornish elm in the south-west of Britain remains a matter of contention. It is commonly assumed to have been introduced from Brittany.[2] It is also considered possible that the tree may have survived the ice ages on lands to the south of Cornwall long since lost to the sea.[3] Henry thought it "probably native in the south of Ireland".[4] Dr Max Coleman of Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, arguing in his 2002 paper on British elms that there was no clear distinction between species and subspecies, suggested that known or suspected clones of Ulmus minor, once cultivated and named, should be treated as cultivars, preferred the designation U. minor 'Stricta' to Ulmus minor var. stricta. The DNA of 'Stricta' has been investigated and the cultivar is now known to be a clone.[5]

Ulmus minor 'Stricta'
U. minor 'Stricta', Coldrenick, Cornwall, before 1913
SpeciesUlmus minor
Cultivar'Stricta'
OriginEngland

Mature trees labelled 'Cornish elm' are now largely restricted to Australia, where they were introduced in the 19th century (but see 'Stricta'-like cultivars below).[6][7]

Description edit

Growing to a height of up to 27 metres (89 ft) in sheltered situations (in exposed situations it is usually half the size),[8] the Cornish elm is a slender, slow-growing deciduous tree, distinguished by its long, straight trunk, which culminates in a narrow fan-shaped crown comprising short, straight, ascending branches.[9] The leaves are small, obovate to oval, typically acuminate at the apex, 6 cm long by 3.5 cm broad, with a dark-green upper surface, glossy and smooth.[10][11][12] The perfect apetalous wind-pollinated flowers occur in clusters of 15–20 on very short pedicels. The samarae rarely ripen in England, but when mature are very similar to those of others in the field elm group, being mostly obovate, 16 mm long by 10 mm broad. A survey of Cornish elms in County Cork, Ireland (2007), found some variation in smoothness or roughness of leaf-surface and in basal asymmetry.[1]

Dr Oliver Rackham (1986) noted that Cornish elms with "more spreading" crowns grow around Truro and on the Lizard Peninsula, illustrating the variety, which he called 'Lizard Elm', with a 1980 photograph.[13][14] The large old specimen of Cornish elm in Castletownbere Cemetery in County Cork, Ireland (see 'Notable trees' below) matches Rackham's description and photograph of his 'Lizard Elm'.[15]

Pests and diseases edit

Cornish elm is very susceptible to Dutch elm disease, but suckers remain a common component of hedgerows in parts of Cornwall, and thus the genetic resources of this cultivar are not considered endangered.[16] Like other field elms, propagation is almost entirely by suckers, which the tree produces copiously.[2][17]

Cultivation and uses edit

 
Pilot gigs made from Cornish elm returning from a race at Mevagissey, 2001

Cornish elm was traditionally considered the best shelter-belt tree along the Cornish coast. Its timber was much prized for its strength, and was commonly used in wheel and wagon construction.[18] Working Cornish pilot gigs were traditionally built from Cornish elm: the Rules of the Cornish Pilot Gig Association specified that to take part in gig races the boat should be made from "Cornish narrow-leaved elm".[19][20] Ley (1910) described Cornish elm as "abundant in Brittany, very abundant in West Cornwall, becoming less abundant in East Cornwall and West Devon".[8] Cornish elm was later cultivated as an ornamental tree in parts of southern England and southern Ireland, and, more rarely, in UK urban plantings. Hillier & Sons nursery, Winchester, Hampshire, was among the nurseries that supplied it, carefully distinguishing it from Wheatley elm.[21] The locations of notable plantings of Cornish elm, both in Cornwall and beyond, are listed in Henry (1913),[4] Richens (1983),[2] and Mitchell (1996).[22]

Few mature specimens are known to survive in the wild in England. Only one is known in Cornwall (see under 'Notable trees'), while about 18 reputedly grow in the Brighton & Hove enclave.[23] Another two have been reported (2009) from East Sussex at Selmeston, near the footpath across the grounds of Sherrington Manor.[24] Two specimens survive in Edinburgh (2019), an old tree in Dean Gardens,[25] and a younger by Greenside Church, Calton Hill.

The Wheatley or Guernsey elm (Ulmus minor 'Sarniensis') was often misnamed "Cornish elm" in the UK by the local authorities who planted it extensively.[26][27] Introduced to the US, Ulmus campestris cornubiensis, 'Cornish elm', appeared from the 1860s in catalogues of the Mount Hope Nursery (also known as Ellwanger and Barry) of Rochester, New York,[28][29] later catalogues distinguishing it from Wheatley Elm.[30] Cornish Elm also appeared separately from Wheatley Elm in the catalogues of the Brown Brothers' Nursery[31] and the Perry Nursery Co. of Rochester, N.Y.[32]

For so-called Cornish elm in Australia, see 'Stricta'-like cultivars below.

Notable trees edit

The Great Elm of Rosuic, an ancient pollard elm which attained a d.b.h. of over 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) before succumbing to disease, continues to produce suckers.[33][34]

As of 2011, the Woodland Trust lists only one verified mature Cornish elm surviving in Cornwall, a specimen 1.89 metres (6.2 ft) in girth at Tregoose near Helston.[35] A large specimen with a forked trunk stands in Castletownbere Cemetery in County Cork, Ireland,[15] with a bole-girth (2007) of 450 cm (making it about 150 years old), a height of 25 m and a crown diameter of 20 m, along with a small number of younger Cornish elms with an average d.b.h. of 143 cm.[1][36]

Synonymy edit

  • U. cornubiensis Weston (1770)
  • U. nitens var. stricta Aiton (1789)
  • U. stricta Lindley (1829)
  • U. campestris var. cornubiensis Loudon (1838)
  • ?U. reticulata Dumort. stricta Dumort.[37]
  • U. carpinifolia var. cornubiensis

Varieties edit

An Ulmus stricta parvifolia, a "less common" form of Cornish elm, was described by Lindley in A Synopsis of British Flora, arranged according to the Natural Order (1829), from trees in Cornwall and North Devon, with "leaves much smaller" than Cornish elm, "less oblique at the base, finely and regularly crenate" and "acuminate" rather than, as in Cornish elm, "cuspidate".[38][39][40] Melville considered Goodyer's elm a variety of Cornish elm. Some nurseries listed 'Dickson's Golden Elm' as form of Cornish elm.

Hybrids edit

It has been suggested that the cultivar 'Daveyi' is a natural hybrid of Wych elm and Cornish elm;[41][42] likewise 'Exoniensis'. F. J. Fontaine conjectured that the cultivar Ulmus 'Purpurea' is related to the Cornish elm.[43]

'Stricta'-like elms edit

An U. campestris cornubiensis (syn. U. glabra cornubiensis) was distributed by the Späth nursery, Berlin, in the late 19th century and early 20th. Henry stated that the "beautiful narrow pyramidal tree" he had seen by that name in Späth's nursery differed from true Cornish elm, bearing instead "leaves similar in size and appearance to a common form of U. nitens" [:U. minor].[44][45] One specimen of Späth's U. campestris cornubiensis was supplied to the Dominion Arboretum, Ottawa, Canada in 1897,[46] and three to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh in 1902,[47] one being planted in the Garden proper and cultivated as U. stricta,[48] the other two being planted in the city. In 1958 Melville likewise queried Späth's Cornish elm (see External links below, herbarium specimen E00824799); Edward Kemp, however, RBGE curator (1950–71), accepted it.[49] A specimen of what appears from herbarium specimens to be the same clone survives (2016) in Edinburgh (height about 25 m, girth about 2 m), in Douglas Crescent Gardens.[50][51] The latter also matches an 1825 herbarium specimen labelled "U. suberosa var., Hort. Millburn".[52]

Moss in The Cambridge British Flora (1914) noted that 'Hunnybunii pseudo-Stricta' was sometimes propagated in error for Cornish elm, Ulmus minor 'Stricta'.[53]

 
Elms supplied as 'Cornubiensis', St. Stephen's Church, Mittagong, NSW[7]

A cultivar supplied as 'Cornubiensis' remains in cultivation in Australia, but Spencer, describing it in Horticultural Flora of South-Eastern Australia (1995), noted that it was not type-'Stricta'. He gave as an example the elms beside St. Stephen's Church, Mittagong, NSW.[7] The tree labelled (2022) 'Cornish Elm' in Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria (Melbourne),[54] is the hybrid 'Purpurea', cultivated in south-eastern Australia and thought by Dutch elm-authority F. J. Fontaine to be a Cornish elm "cross".[55]

In art edit

Landscape-paintings depicting Cornish elm include Holman Hunt's watercolour Helston, Cornwall (1860), showing hedgerow elms,[56][57] and the watercolour Egloshayle, Cornwall by Thomas Campbell-Bennett (1858-1948), showing Cornish elms beside the River Camel, opposite the church of St Mary, Egloshayle.[58] The latter illustrates Gerald Wilkinson's observation that "In its normal habitat the Cornish elm often has a flat, wind-cut top".[59]

Accessions edit

North America
Europe
Australasia

Nurseries edit

Australasia

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Mackenthun, G. L. (2007) The elms of Co. Cork - a survey of species, varieties and forms. Irish Forestry Vol 64, (1 & 2) 2007; p.48, p.53
  2. ^ a b c Richens, R. H. (1983). Elm. Cambridge University Press
  3. ^ White, J. & More, D. (2002). Trees of Britain & Northern Europe. Cassell's, London.
  4. ^ a b Elwes, Henry John; Henry, Augustine (1913). The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. Vol. 7. pp. 1891–1892.
  5. ^ Coleman M. (2002) 'British elms.' British Wildlife 13 (6): 390–395.
  6. ^ Spencer, R., Hawker, J. and Lumley, P. (1991). Elms in Australia. Australia: Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. ISBN 0724199624.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b c Spencer, Roger, ed., Horticultural Flora of South-Eastern Australia, Vol. 2 (Sydney, 1995), Ulmus, p. 113 [1]
  8. ^ a b Ley, Augustin (1910). "Notes on British elms". Journal of Botany, British and Foreign. 48: 65–72. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
  9. ^ Diagnostic photographs of Cornish elm in St Austell (Francis Frith Collection); at Coldrenick, Menheniot (Elwes and Henry, The Trees of Britain and Ireland vol.VII, Plate 397 [after p.1933]); in Zelah (oldcornwall.netfirms.com) 2006-08-18 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ "Herbarium specimen - L.1590640". Botany catalogues. Naturalis Biodiversity Center. Sheet described as var. stricta, "the prevailing elm about Trelissick and Truro", Cornwall (1908)
  11. ^ herbariaunited.org, herbarium specimen, Ulmus minor subsp. angustifolia, Cornish elm leaves, Falmouth, 1850
  12. ^ Brian Eversham, 'Identifying British Elms, Ulmus '; Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire Wildlife Trusts, v. 2.3.1 July 2021; p.76
  13. ^ Rackham, Oliver, The History of the Countryside (London, 1986),  p.236
  14. ^ 'Stricta' from St Anthony-in-Meneage, Lizard Peninsula, bioportal.naturalis.nl, specimen L.1582352
  15. ^ a b Cornish elm in Castletownbere Cemetery, County Cork, Ireland; ulmen-handbuch.de
  16. ^ Ipgri.cgiar.org[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ Stace, C. A. (1997). New Flora of the British Isles, 2nd edition. Cambridge University Press
  18. ^ Elwes, H. J. & Henry, A. (1913). The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. Vol. VII. 1848–1929. Republished 2004 Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9781108069380
  19. ^ Cornish Pilot Gig Association, cpga.co.uk/
  20. ^ Edwards, Ian, 'Uses of Elm Past and Present', in Coleman, Max, ed. Wych Elm (Edinburgh (2009), p.45
  21. ^ Trees and Shrubs Catalogue, Hillier & Sons, 1958–1959, p.99
  22. ^ Mitchell, Alan (1996). Alan Mitchell's Trees of Britain. London: HarperCollins. pp. 345–356. ISBN 0-00-219972-6.
  23. ^ a b "List of plants in the {elm} collection". Brighton & Hove City Council. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  24. ^ South Downs Online[permanent dead link]
  25. ^ "'Stricta' in Dean Gardens, Edinburgh". Google Maps. October 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  26. ^ Mitchell, A. (1996) The Trees of Britain (London)
  27. ^ Howes, C. A. (2007). Seaward, M. R. D. (ed.). "The Wheatley elm: A fading part of Yorkshire's arbocultural heritage?". The Naturalist. 132 (1060): 63–66.
  28. ^ Ellwanger & Barry, Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Ornamental Trees ... at the Mount Hope Nurseries (Rochester, N.Y., 1868), p.8
  29. ^ Ellwanger & Barry, Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Ornamental Trees ... at the Mount Hope Nurseries (Rochester, N.Y., 1875)
  30. ^ Ellwanger & Barry, Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Ornamental Trees ... at the Mount Hope Nurseries (Rochester, N.Y., 1899), p.63
  31. ^ 'General catalogue of fruit and ornamental trees', Brown Brothers Co., Rochester, N.Y., 1899, p.68 & 70
  32. ^ Illustrated and descriptive catalogue of fruit and ornamental trees, Perry Nursery Co., Rochester, N.Y., 1912, p.90
  33. ^ "Ancient Trees in Cornwall (third paragraph)". Cornwall Council. 17 February 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2011. Based on a chapter written by Sue Pring in 'Glorious Gardens of Cornwall' published by the Cornwall Gardens Trust.
  34. ^ Rackham, Oliver, A History of the Countryside (London, 1986)
  35. ^ Details and photographs of Tregoose elm. Ancient-tree-hunt.org.
  36. ^ Cornish elm; ulmen-handbuch.de
  37. ^ botanicalcollections.be specimen BR0000005422838
  38. ^ Lindley, John (1829). A synopsis of the British Flora; arranged according to the Natural Orders. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green. pp. 226–227. Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  39. ^ Loudon, J. C., Hortus lignosus londinensis (London 1838), p.92-4
  40. ^ "Herbarium specimen - E00824736". Herbarium Catalogue. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Sheet (left hand side) described as U. stricta (Royal Botanic Society specimen, 1843); "Herbarium specimen BR0000005422838". Botanic Garden, Meise. Sheet labelled Ulmus reticulata Dumort. stricta Dumort., re-labelled U. cornubiensis by Melville (juvenile leaves)
  41. ^ "Home Page - Cornwall Council".
  42. ^ Archie Miles, Hidden Trees of Britain, Ebury Press, 2007,  p.17
  43. ^ F. J., Fontaine (1968). "Ulmus". Dendroflora. 5: 37–55. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  44. ^ Elwes & Henry (1913), p.1891
  45. ^ Späth's atypical 'Cornubiensis': "Herbarium specimen - WAG.1853199". Botany catalogues. Naturalis Biodiversity Center. U. cornubiensis Kirchn. (from Späth nursery); "Herbarium specimen - E00824856". Herbarium Catalogue. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. U. glabra cornubiensis [ = U. campestris cornubiensis from Späth nursery, 1902]; "Herbarium specimen - E00824857". Herbarium Catalogue. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. U. glabra cornubiensis [ = U. campestris cornubiensis from Späth, 1902]; "Herbarium specimen - E00824858". Herbarium Catalogue. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. U. glabra cornubiensis [ = U. campestris cornubiensis from Späth, 1902]; "Herbarium specimen - E00824799". Herbarium Catalogue. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. U. campestris cornubiensis from Späth, 1902
  46. ^ Catalogue of the trees and shrubs in the arboretum and botanic gardens at the central experimental farm (2nd ed.). Ottawa. 1899. p. 75.
  47. ^ Accessions book. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. 1902. pp. 45, 47.
  48. ^ RBGE Cultivated herbarium accessions book: Elms cultivated at Edinburgh Botanic Garden (1958), tree C2699
  49. ^ A photograph of the RBGE 'Stricta' appears in Clouston, B., & Stansfield, K., eds. After the Elm (London 1979)
  50. ^ Edinburgh 'Stricta' may be seen on Google Streetview, from 1 Douglas Gardens.
  51. ^ Edinburgh 'Stricta' above Dean Village
  52. ^ 1825 herbarium-specimen
  53. ^ Moss, C. E.; Hunnybun, E. W. (1914). The Cambridge British Flora. Vol. 2 Text. p. 90. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  54. ^ RBGV (Melbourne) Elm list
  55. ^ Photographs of 'Cornish Elm' sent from RBGV (Melbourne), 2022
  56. ^ cornwallartists.org/cornwall-artists/william-holman-hunt
  57. ^ Richens, R. H., Elm (Cambridge 1983), ch.8
  58. ^ Egloshayle, Cornwall by Thomas Campbell-Bennett, antique-fine-art.com [2]. The same trees in a 1920 photograph, 'Wadebridge, 1920', francisfrith.com: [3] and in 1895, 'Wadebridge from Egloshayle, 1895', francisfrith.com: [4]
  59. ^ Wilkinson, Gerald, Epitaph for the Elm (London, 1978), p.70
  60. ^ Cambridge Botanic Garden
  61. ^ Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, Catalogue of the Living Collections, data.rbge.org.uk; as Ulmus minor subsp. angustifolia (Weston) Stace. Acc. no. 20171184
  62. ^ Spencer, R.; Hawker, J. & Lumley, P. (1991). Elms in Australia. Australia: Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne. ISBN 0-7241-9962-4.
  63. ^ EstablishedTrees.com.au

External links edit

  • Jobling & Mitchell, 'Field Recognition of British Elms', Forestry Commission Booklet

ulmus, minor, stricta, field, cultivar, known, cornish, commonly, found, south, west, england, cornwall, west, devon, brittany, south, west, ireland, until, arrival, dutch, disease, late, 1960s, origin, cornish, south, west, britain, remains, matter, contentio. The field elm cultivar Ulmus minor Stricta known as Cornish elm was commonly found in South West England Cornwall and West Devon Brittany and south west Ireland 1 until the arrival of Dutch elm disease in the late 1960s The origin of Cornish elm in the south west of Britain remains a matter of contention It is commonly assumed to have been introduced from Brittany 2 It is also considered possible that the tree may have survived the ice ages on lands to the south of Cornwall long since lost to the sea 3 Henry thought it probably native in the south of Ireland 4 Dr Max Coleman of Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh arguing in his 2002 paper on British elms that there was no clear distinction between species and subspecies suggested that known or suspected clones of Ulmus minor once cultivated and named should be treated as cultivars preferred the designation U minor Stricta to Ulmus minor var stricta The DNA of Stricta has been investigated and the cultivar is now known to be a clone 5 Ulmus minor Stricta U minor Stricta Coldrenick Cornwall before 1913SpeciesUlmus minorCultivar Stricta OriginEngland Mature trees labelled Cornish elm are now largely restricted to Australia where they were introduced in the 19th century but see Stricta like cultivars below 6 7 Contents 1 Description 2 Pests and diseases 3 Cultivation and uses 4 Notable trees 5 Synonymy 6 Varieties 7 Hybrids 8 Stricta like elms 9 In art 10 Accessions 11 Nurseries 12 References 13 External linksDescription editGrowing to a height of up to 27 metres 89 ft in sheltered situations in exposed situations it is usually half the size 8 the Cornish elm is a slender slow growing deciduous tree distinguished by its long straight trunk which culminates in a narrow fan shaped crown comprising short straight ascending branches 9 The leaves are small obovate to oval typically acuminate at the apex 6 cm long by 3 5 cm broad with a dark green upper surface glossy and smooth 10 11 12 The perfect apetalous wind pollinated flowers occur in clusters of 15 20 on very short pedicels The samarae rarely ripen in England but when mature are very similar to those of others in the field elm group being mostly obovate 16 mm long by 10 mm broad A survey of Cornish elms in County Cork Ireland 2007 found some variation in smoothness or roughness of leaf surface and in basal asymmetry 1 nbsp Cornish elm Hampstead Cemetery 1912 nbsp Cornish elm in Preston Park Brighton 2005 nbsp Stricta Finistere France 1996 nbsp Long shoot leaves of Cornish elm Penhalvean Cornwall Dr Oliver Rackham 1986 noted that Cornish elms with more spreading crowns grow around Truro and on the Lizard Peninsula illustrating the variety which he called Lizard Elm with a 1980 photograph 13 14 The large old specimen of Cornish elm in Castletownbere Cemetery in County Cork Ireland see Notable trees below matches Rackham s description and photograph of his Lizard Elm 15 nbsp More spreading form of Cornish elm Calton Hill Park Edinburgh nbsp Bark of Cornish elm Calton Hill Park Edinburgh nbsp Short shoot leaves of Cornish elm Calton Hill Park Edinburgh nbsp Short shoot leaves of Cornish elm EdinburghPests and diseases editCornish elm is very susceptible to Dutch elm disease but suckers remain a common component of hedgerows in parts of Cornwall and thus the genetic resources of this cultivar are not considered endangered 16 Like other field elms propagation is almost entirely by suckers which the tree produces copiously 2 17 Cultivation and uses edit nbsp Pilot gigs made from Cornish elm returning from a race at Mevagissey 2001 Cornish elm was traditionally considered the best shelter belt tree along the Cornish coast Its timber was much prized for its strength and was commonly used in wheel and wagon construction 18 Working Cornish pilot gigs were traditionally built from Cornish elm the Rules of the Cornish Pilot Gig Association specified that to take part in gig races the boat should be made from Cornish narrow leaved elm 19 20 Ley 1910 described Cornish elm as abundant in Brittany very abundant in West Cornwall becoming less abundant in East Cornwall and West Devon 8 Cornish elm was later cultivated as an ornamental tree in parts of southern England and southern Ireland and more rarely in UK urban plantings Hillier amp Sons nursery Winchester Hampshire was among the nurseries that supplied it carefully distinguishing it from Wheatley elm 21 The locations of notable plantings of Cornish elm both in Cornwall and beyond are listed in Henry 1913 4 Richens 1983 2 and Mitchell 1996 22 Few mature specimens are known to survive in the wild in England Only one is known in Cornwall see under Notable trees while about 18 reputedly grow in the Brighton amp Hove enclave 23 Another two have been reported 2009 from East Sussex at Selmeston near the footpath across the grounds of Sherrington Manor 24 Two specimens survive in Edinburgh 2019 an old tree in Dean Gardens 25 and a younger by Greenside Church Calton Hill The Wheatley or Guernsey elm Ulmus minor Sarniensis was often misnamed Cornish elm in the UK by the local authorities who planted it extensively 26 27 Introduced to the US Ulmus campestris cornubiensis Cornish elm appeared from the 1860s in catalogues of the Mount Hope Nursery also known as Ellwanger and Barry of Rochester New York 28 29 later catalogues distinguishing it from Wheatley Elm 30 Cornish Elm also appeared separately from Wheatley Elm in the catalogues of the Brown Brothers Nursery 31 and the Perry Nursery Co of Rochester N Y 32 For so called Cornish elm in Australia see Stricta like cultivars below Notable trees editThe Great Elm of Rosuic an ancient pollard elm which attained a d b h of over 2 5 metres 8 2 ft before succumbing to disease continues to produce suckers 33 34 As of 2011 update the Woodland Trust lists only one verified mature Cornish elm surviving in Cornwall a specimen 1 89 metres 6 2 ft in girth at Tregoose near Helston 35 A large specimen with a forked trunk stands in Castletownbere Cemetery in County Cork Ireland 15 with a bole girth 2007 of 450 cm making it about 150 years old a height of 25 m and a crown diameter of 20 m along with a small number of younger Cornish elms with an average d b h of 143 cm 1 36 Synonymy editU cornubiensis Weston 1770 U nitens var stricta Aiton 1789 U stricta Lindley 1829 U campestris var cornubiensis Loudon 1838 U reticulata Dumort stricta Dumort 37 U carpinifolia var cornubiensisVarieties editAn Ulmus stricta parvifolia a less common form of Cornish elm was described by Lindley in A Synopsis of British Flora arranged according to the Natural Order 1829 from trees in Cornwall and North Devon with leaves much smaller than Cornish elm less oblique at the base finely and regularly crenate and acuminate rather than as in Cornish elm cuspidate 38 39 40 Melville considered Goodyer s elm a variety of Cornish elm Some nurseries listed Dickson s Golden Elm as form of Cornish elm Hybrids editIt has been suggested that the cultivar Daveyi is a natural hybrid of Wych elm and Cornish elm 41 42 likewise Exoniensis F J Fontaine conjectured that the cultivar Ulmus Purpurea is related to the Cornish elm 43 Stricta like elms editAn U campestris cornubiensis syn U glabra cornubiensis was distributed by the Spath nursery Berlin in the late 19th century and early 20th Henry stated that the beautiful narrow pyramidal tree he had seen by that name in Spath s nursery differed from true Cornish elm bearing instead leaves similar in size and appearance to a common form of U nitens U minor 44 45 One specimen of Spath s U campestris cornubiensis was supplied to the Dominion Arboretum Ottawa Canada in 1897 46 and three to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh in 1902 47 one being planted in the Garden proper and cultivated as U stricta 48 the other two being planted in the city In 1958 Melville likewise queried Spath s Cornish elm see External links below herbarium specimen E00824799 Edward Kemp however RBGE curator 1950 71 accepted it 49 A specimen of what appears from herbarium specimens to be the same clone survives 2016 in Edinburgh height about 25 m girth about 2 m in Douglas Crescent Gardens 50 51 The latter also matches an 1825 herbarium specimen labelled U suberosa var Hort Millburn 52 nbsp Spath s U campestris cornubiensis Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh nbsp Douglas Crescent Gardens elm Edinburgh nbsp Leaves of same nbsp Bark nbsp Bole nbsp Samara Moss in The Cambridge British Flora 1914 noted that Hunnybunii pseudo Stricta was sometimes propagated in error for Cornish elm Ulmus minor Stricta 53 nbsp Elms supplied as Cornubiensis St Stephen s Church Mittagong NSW 7 A cultivar supplied as Cornubiensis remains in cultivation in Australia but Spencer describing it in Horticultural Flora of South Eastern Australia 1995 noted that it was not type Stricta He gave as an example the elms beside St Stephen s Church Mittagong NSW 7 The tree labelled 2022 Cornish Elm in Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria Melbourne 54 is the hybrid Purpurea cultivated in south eastern Australia and thought by Dutch elm authority F J Fontaine to be a Cornish elm cross 55 In art editLandscape paintings depicting Cornish elm include Holman Hunt s watercolour Helston Cornwall 1860 showing hedgerow elms 56 57 and the watercolour Egloshayle Cornwall by Thomas Campbell Bennett 1858 1948 showing Cornish elms beside the River Camel opposite the church of St Mary Egloshayle 58 The latter illustrates Gerald Wilkinson s observation that In its normal habitat the Cornish elm often has a flat wind cut top 59 Accessions editNorth America Arnold Arboretum US Acc no 17676 and acc no 328 81 two trees Bartlett Tree Nurseries US Acc no 96 2161 details unavailable J C Raulston Arboretum North Carolina State University US Details unavailable Europe Brighton amp Hove City Council UK NCCPG Elm Collection 23 12 trees in Bear Road Cemetery 2 in Hove Cemetery 2 along Queen s Park Road 1 along Buckingham Road 1 at Benfield Valley Hove Golf Course Cambridge Botanic Garden 60 University of Cambridge UK as U angustifolia var cornubiensis no accession details available Grange Farm Arboretum Sutton St James Spalding Lincolnshire UK As U minor subsp angustifolia Acc no 1079 Wijdemeren City Council Netherlands Elm collection 2 planted at cemetery De Hornhof Slotlaan Nederhorst den Berg 2015 cultivation Noordplant Nursery Glimmen Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Acc no 20171184 61 Australasia Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney Australia 62 Nurseries editAustralasia Established Tree Transplanters Pty Ltd 63 Wandin Victoria Australia References edit a b c Mackenthun G L 2007 The elms of Co Cork a survey of species varieties and forms Irish Forestry Vol 64 1 amp 2 2007 p 48 p 53 a b c Richens R H 1983 Elm Cambridge University Press White J amp More D 2002 Trees of Britain amp Northern Europe Cassell s London a b Elwes Henry John Henry Augustine 1913 The Trees of Great Britain amp Ireland Vol 7 pp 1891 1892 Coleman M 2002 British elms British Wildlife 13 6 390 395 Spencer R Hawker J and Lumley P 1991 Elms in Australia Australia Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne ISBN 0724199624 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Spencer Roger ed Horticultural Flora of South Eastern Australia Vol 2 Sydney 1995 Ulmus p 113 1 a b Ley Augustin 1910 Notes on British elms Journal of Botany British and Foreign 48 65 72 Retrieved 8 February 2018 Diagnostic photographs of Cornish elm in St Austell Francis Frith Collection at Coldrenick Menheniot Elwes and Henry The Trees of Britain and Ireland vol VII Plate 397 after p 1933 in Zelah oldcornwall netfirms com Archived 2006 08 18 at the Wayback Machine Herbarium specimen L 1590640 Botany catalogues Naturalis Biodiversity Center Sheet described as var stricta the prevailing elm about Trelissick and Truro Cornwall 1908 herbariaunited org herbarium specimen Ulmus minor subsp angustifolia Cornish elm leaves Falmouth 1850 Brian Eversham Identifying British Elms Ulmus Bedfordshire Cambridgeshire Northamptonshire Wildlife Trusts v 2 3 1 July 2021 p 76 Rackham Oliver The History of the Countryside London 1986 p 236 Stricta from St Anthony in Meneage Lizard Peninsula bioportal naturalis nl specimen L 1582352 a b Cornish elm in Castletownbere Cemetery County Cork Ireland ulmen handbuch de Ipgri cgiar org permanent dead link Stace C A 1997 New Flora of the British Isles 2nd edition Cambridge University Press Elwes H J amp Henry A 1913 The Trees of Great Britain amp Ireland Vol VII 1848 1929 Republished 2004 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108069380 Cornish Pilot Gig Association cpga co uk Edwards Ian Uses of Elm Past and Present in Coleman Max ed Wych Elm Edinburgh 2009 p 45 Trees and Shrubs Catalogue Hillier amp Sons 1958 1959 p 99 Mitchell Alan 1996 Alan Mitchell s Trees of Britain London HarperCollins pp 345 356 ISBN 0 00 219972 6 a b List of plants in the elm collection Brighton amp Hove City Council Retrieved 23 September 2016 South Downs Online permanent dead link Stricta in Dean Gardens Edinburgh Google Maps October 2016 Retrieved 1 July 2019 Mitchell A 1996 The Trees of Britain London Howes C A 2007 Seaward M R D ed The Wheatley elm A fading part of Yorkshire s arbocultural heritage The Naturalist 132 1060 63 66 Ellwanger amp Barry Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Ornamental Trees at the Mount Hope Nurseries Rochester N Y 1868 p 8 Ellwanger amp Barry Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Ornamental Trees at the Mount Hope Nurseries Rochester N Y 1875 Ellwanger amp Barry Descriptive Catalogue of Hardy Ornamental Trees at the Mount Hope Nurseries Rochester N Y 1899 p 63 General catalogue of fruit and ornamental trees Brown Brothers Co Rochester N Y 1899 p 68 amp 70 Illustrated and descriptive catalogue of fruit and ornamental trees Perry Nursery Co Rochester N Y 1912 p 90 Ancient Trees in Cornwall third paragraph Cornwall Council 17 February 2010 Retrieved 5 May 2011 Based on a chapter written by Sue Pring in Glorious Gardens of Cornwall published by the Cornwall Gardens Trust Rackham Oliver A History of the Countryside London 1986 Details and photographs of Tregoose elm Ancient tree hunt org Cornish elm ulmen handbuch de botanicalcollections be specimen BR0000005422838 Lindley John 1829 A synopsis of the British Flora arranged according to the Natural Orders London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green pp 226 227 Retrieved 14 December 2017 Loudon J C Hortus lignosus londinensis London 1838 p 92 4 Herbarium specimen E00824736 Herbarium Catalogue Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Sheet left hand side described as U stricta Royal Botanic Society specimen 1843 Herbarium specimen BR0000005422838 Botanic Garden Meise Sheet labelled Ulmus reticulata Dumort stricta Dumort re labelled U cornubiensis by Melville juvenile leaves Home Page Cornwall Council Archie Miles Hidden Trees of Britain Ebury Press 2007 p 17 F J Fontaine 1968 Ulmus Dendroflora 5 37 55 Retrieved 30 August 2017 Elwes amp Henry 1913 p 1891 Spath s atypical Cornubiensis Herbarium specimen WAG 1853199 Botany catalogues Naturalis Biodiversity Center U cornubiensis Kirchn from Spath nursery Herbarium specimen E00824856 Herbarium Catalogue Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh U glabra cornubiensis U campestris cornubiensis from Spath nursery 1902 Herbarium specimen E00824857 Herbarium Catalogue Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh U glabra cornubiensis U campestris cornubiensis from Spath 1902 Herbarium specimen E00824858 Herbarium Catalogue Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh U glabra cornubiensis U campestris cornubiensis from Spath 1902 Herbarium specimen E00824799 Herbarium Catalogue Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh U campestris cornubiensis from Spath 1902 Catalogue of the trees and shrubs in the arboretum and botanic gardens at the central experimental farm 2nd ed Ottawa 1899 p 75 Accessions book Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 1902 pp 45 47 RBGE Cultivated herbarium accessions book Elms cultivated at Edinburgh Botanic Garden 1958 tree C2699 A photograph of the RBGE Stricta appears in Clouston B amp Stansfield K eds After the Elm London 1979 Edinburgh Stricta may be seen on Google Streetview from 1 Douglas Gardens Edinburgh Stricta above Dean Village 1825 herbarium specimen Moss C E Hunnybun E W 1914 The Cambridge British Flora Vol 2 Text p 90 Retrieved 13 December 2017 RBGV Melbourne Elm list Photographs of Cornish Elm sent from RBGV Melbourne 2022 cornwallartists org cornwall artists william holman hunt Richens R H Elm Cambridge 1983 ch 8 Egloshayle Cornwall by Thomas Campbell Bennett antique fine art com 2 The same trees in a 1920 photograph Wadebridge 1920 francisfrith com 3 and in 1895 Wadebridge from Egloshayle 1895 francisfrith com 4 Wilkinson Gerald Epitaph for the Elm London 1978 p 70 Cambridge Botanic Garden Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh Catalogue of the Living Collections data rbge org uk as Ulmus minor subsp angustifolia Weston Stace Acc no 20171184 Spencer R Hawker J amp Lumley P 1991 Elms in Australia Australia Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne ISBN 0 7241 9962 4 EstablishedTrees com auExternal links edit nbsp Cornwall portal Jobling amp Mitchell Field Recognition of British Elms Forestry Commission Booklet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ulmus minor 27Stricta 27 amp oldid 1213335759, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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