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Ulmus × hollandica 'Major'

Ulmus × hollandica 'Major' is a distinctive cultivar that in England came to be known specifically as the Dutch Elm, although all naturally occurring Field Elm Ulmus minor × Wych Elm U. glabra hybrids are loosely termed 'Dutch elm' (U. × hollandica). It is also known by the cultivar name 'Hollandica'. Nellie Bancroft considered 'Major' either an F2 hybrid or a backcrossing with one of its parents.[1]

Ulmus × hollandica 'Major'
'Major', Fettes Row, Edinburgh
Hybrid parentageU. glabra × U. minor
Cultivar'Major'
Originnorthern France and Low Countries; (as cultivar) England

According to Richens the tree was a native of Picardy and elsewhere in northern France, where it was known from the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries as ypereau or ypreau.[2] 'Major' was said to have been introduced to England from the Netherlands in the late seventeenth century as a fashion-elm associated with William and Mary,[3] the name 'Dutch Elm' having been coined by Queen Mary's resident botanist Dr Leonard Plukenet.[4]

The epithet 'Major' was first adopted by Smith in Sowerby's English Botany 36: t. 2542, published in 1814, identifying the tree as Ulmus major. Krüssmann formally recognized the tree as the cultivar U. × hollandica 'Major' in 1962.[5]

Richens (1983) states that Elwes and Henry in their account of Dutch Elm (1913) "confused Dutch Elm with English".[6] He gives no evidence but can only have been referring to Henry's statement that "in many districts ['Major'] is the commonest tree in hedgerows".[7] Richens was writing seventy years after Henry, after a Dutch elm disease epidemic, two world wars, and decades of urbanisation and road-widening. Henry's statement was not necessarily a case of misidentification – or an exaggeration. Elwes and Henry's account of Dutch Elm remains a pioneering one.[8]

Description edit

In areas unaffected by Dutch elm disease, 'Major' often attains a height of > 30 m, with a short bole and irregular, wide-spreading branches. In open-grown specimens, the canopy is less dense than that of the English elm or Wych elm. The bark of the trunk is dark and deeply fissured and, like English elm, forms irregular 'plates' in mature specimens, serving to distinguish it from the Huntingdon Elm (latticed bark), the other commonly planted U. × hollandica in the UK.[9]

The leaves are oval, < 12 cm long by 7 cm wide, the top surface dark green and glossy, with a long serrated point at the apex.[10] The red apetalous, perfect, wind-pollinated flowers are produced in spring in large clusters of up to 50. The obovate samarae are up to 25 mm long by 18 mm broad. The cultivar may be distinguished from other elms by the corky ridges which on mature trees occur only on the epicormic branches of the trunk. The bark of branches and twigs is otherwise smooth.[11] On immature trees and suckers, the corky bark is more pronounced.

Elwes and Henry state that the seed is rarely viable, Bancroft that it is always sterile.[1] The tree suckers profusely from roots.[2][12][7] In southern Britain, 'Major' is commonly found as a sucker, sometimes in mixed hedgerows with English Elm; large Dutch Elm sucker-populations have been found in south west Wales, Cornwall, and along the Channel coast. The suckers of Dutch Elm are sometimes confused with those of English Elm, which may explain the widespread and random occurrence of the former in hedgerows in southern Britain. 'Major' comes into leaf some three weeks later than English elm, and loses its leaves some three weeks earlier, and when young, its branching is straighter, stouter and more open. It is usually more vigorous than English elm.[7] The larger, tapering leaves, predominantly corky bark, and bold herringbone outline of Dutch Elm suckers also help to distinguish them from those of English elm.

Pests and diseases edit

Ulmus × hollandica 'Major' is very susceptible to Dutch elm disease.

Cultivation edit

The ‘Dutch’ elm quickly became popular in eighteenth-century estate plantations in England, survivors today being naturalised relics of this planting fashion; but the tree was always rare in the Netherlands, where from the eighteenth century hollandse iep (Holland elm) meant the widely planted hybrid Ulmus × hollandica Belgica (Belgian Elm).[2] Ley (1910) noted that 'Major' could be found scattered throughout the lowlands of England and Wales, often in the company of English Elm; but, unlike the latter, extended into mountain valleys in South Wales up to 1000 feet.[11] ‘Dutch’ elm was also planted in urban parks, for example in the elm-groves of Kensington Palace Gardens,[7] and, on account of its suckering habit and quick growth,[12] was frequently planted as the elm component in mixed coastal shelter-belts on the south coast, in Cornwall, South Wales, the Isle of Man,[13][14] and East Anglia.[7] The tree was propagated and marketed in the UK by the Hillier & Sons nursery, Winchester, Hampshire from 1949, with 101 sold in the period 1962 to 1977, when production ceased with the advent of the more virulent form of Dutch elm disease.[15][16]

'Major' was introduced to Ireland, where the largest specimens were at Marlfield, County Tipperary,[7] renowned for its elms.[17] It was also the predominant elm in Phoenix Park, Dublin.[7] 'Major' is known to have been marketed (as U. montana gigantea) in Poland in the 19th century by the Ulrich nursery,[18] Warsaw, and may still survive in Eastern Europe.

Ulmus suberosa major, 'The Dutch cork-barked elm', was in US nurseries by the mid-19th century.[19] Arnold Arboretum reported in 1915 that in the USA (as in the UK by the 20th century), 'Major' was sometimes confused with English Elm.[20] 'Major' is grown at several arboreta and along the streets of Portland, Oregon.[21] The cultivar is also grown in parks and avenues in Australia, notably in Melbourne,[22] and in New Zealand.[23]

Notable trees edit

Owing to Dutch elm disease, mature trees are rare in the UK, except in Brighton and Hove, East Sussex; The Level, in Brighton, alone has over 80 specimens in a double avenue. Other examples, including the TROBI Champion (27 m high by 139 cm d.b.h. in 2009, after pollarding) can be seen in the city along the London Road. The specimen at Leeds Castle was, at 38 m, the tallest elm surviving in Britain until it blew down in 2000.[24]

There are also good examples in Edinburgh along Fettes Row, and one at the intersection of Royal Circus and Circus Place (bole-girth 2.5 m), while a single mature 'Major' survives at the extreme east end of East Princes Street Gardens (2015).[25] A 2011 study by Dr Max Coleman of the Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, has confirmed that many thousands of mature 'Major' survive in the Isle of Man.[13][14][26]

Many old trees survive (2018) in New Zealand, notably in Auckland, the finest considered to be the specimen found outside the Ellerslie Racecourse.[23]

Synonymy edit

  • Ulmus × hollandica 'Hollandica': Richens[2]
  • Ulmus montana (: glabra) var. gigantea Hort.: Kirchner [1], in Petzold [2] & Kirchner, Arboretum Muscaviense 564, 1864
  • ?Ulmus montana (: glabra) var. macrophylla fastigiata Hort.: Nicholson, Kew Hand-List Trees & Shrubs, 2: 141, 1896
  • ?Ulmus × hollandica Ypreau: Richens [2]

In art edit

The open, irregular branching of 'Major' appears in Constable's Salisbury Cathedral from the bishop's grounds (1823),[27] and in G. N. Wright's Wellington Monument, Phoenix Park (c.1830) (see 'Cultivation'). The elm grove in Kensington Gardens, London, said by Elwes to have been 'Major',[7] was illustrated by numerous artists, but most effectively, in Richens' view,[28] by Seymour Haden in his etching Kensington Gardens (1860).[29] The more regular canopy sometimes found in 'Major' appears in a botanical drawing in Loudon's Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannicum (1854).

Accessions edit

North America edit

Europe edit

Australasia edit

Nurseries edit

Australasia edit

  • Established Tree Planters Pty. Ltd., Wandin, Victoria, Australia. [5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bancroft, H. 1934. Notes on the status and nomenclature of the British elms. V. – Elms generally accepted as hybrids, the Dutch Elm. The Gardeners’ Chronicle, 96: 298-299.
  2. ^ a b c d e Richens, R. H., (1983). Elm p. 53–54 also 33, 42.Cambridge University Press, 1983),
  3. ^ Rackham, Oliver (1976). Trees and Woodland in the British Landscape J. M. Dent, London.
  4. ^ Armstrong, J. V.; Sell, P. D. (1996). "A revision of the British elms (Ulmus L., Ulmaceae): the historical background". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 120: 39–50. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1996.tb00478.x. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
  5. ^ Krüssmann, Johann Gerd (1962). Handbuch der Laubgehölze. Vol. 2. p. 537.
  6. ^ Richens, R. H., Elm (Cambridge 1983), p.282
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Elwes, Henry John; Henry, Augustine (1913). The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. Vol. 7. pp. 1883–1887.
  8. ^ Bancroft, H. 1934. Notes on the status and nomenclature of the British elms. V. – Elms generally accepted as hybrids, the Dutch Elm. The Gardeners’ Chronicle, 96: 298-299.
  9. ^ Mitchell, A. (1974). A Field Guide to the Trees of Britain & Northern Europe. Collins, London. ISBN 0-00-219213-6
  10. ^ Photograph of 'Major' leaves, ulmen-handbuch.de
  11. ^ a b Ley, Augustin (1910). "Notes on British elms". Journal of Botany, British and Foreign. 48: 65–72. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
  12. ^ a b Bean, W. J. (1981). Trees and shrubs hardy in Great Britain, 7th edition. Murray, London.
  13. ^ a b Lee, Jimmy (July 2012). "Dutch Elm Disease 2012" (PDF). Biodiversity Matters. Isle of Man Government (5): 3.
  14. ^ a b Coleman, M.; A’Hara, S.W.; Tomlinson, P.R.; Davey, P.J. (2016). "Elm clone identification and the conundrum of the slow spread of Dutch Elm Disease on the Isle of Man". New Journal of Botany. 6 (2–3): 79–89.
  15. ^ Hillier & Sons (1977). Catalogue of Trees & Shrubs. Hillier, Ampfield, UK.
  16. ^ Hillier & Sons Sales inventory 1962 to 1977 (unpublished).
  17. ^ 'Trees of Marlfield Lake', clonmelonline.com/2012/01/trees-of-marlfield-lake/
  18. ^ Ulrich, C. (1894), Katalog Drzew i Krezewow, C. Ulrich, Rok 1893-94, Warszawa
  19. ^ Hovey & Co., Boston, Mass., Catalogue of ornamental trees & shrubs, evergreens and climbing plants, 1855, p.5
  20. ^ Arnold Arboretum Bulletin of Popular Information, Vol.1 N.S., No.14, 23 July 1915, p.56
  21. ^ Dutch Elm in Portland, Oregon: portlandoregon.gov
  22. ^ Dutch Elm avenue, planted 1907, in Caulfield Park, Melbourne: caulfieldpark.com/avenue-of-elms.html
  23. ^ a b Wilcox, Mike; Inglis, Chris (2003). "Auckland's elms" (PDF). Auckland Botanical Society Journal. Auckland Botanical Society. 58 (1): 38–45.
  24. ^ Johnson, O. (2011). Champion Trees of Britain & Ireland, p. 169. Kew Publishing, Kew, London. ISBN 9781842464526.
  25. ^ 'Major' in E. Princes St. Gdns., Edinburgh, edinburgh.gov.uk
  26. ^ prolandscapermagazine.com 24 February 2017
  27. ^ Richens, R. H., Elm (Cambridge 1983), p.173; p.293, note 28
  28. ^ Richens, R. H., Elm (Cambridge 1983), p.150
  29. ^ Seymour Haden, etching, Kensington Gardens (1860), artsy.net

External links edit

  • Jobling & Mitchell, 'Field Recognition of British Elms', Forestry Commission Booklet
  • "Herbarium specimen - WAG.1847104". Botany catalogues. Naturalis Biodiversity Center. Sheet labelled Ulmus x hollandica 'Major', Constitution Ave., Washington, D.C., 1977

ulmus, hollandica, major, distinctive, cultivar, that, england, came, known, specifically, dutch, although, naturally, occurring, field, ulmus, minor, wych, glabra, hybrids, loosely, termed, dutch, hollandica, also, known, cultivar, name, hollandica, nellie, b. Ulmus hollandica Major is a distinctive cultivar that in England came to be known specifically as the Dutch Elm although all naturally occurring Field Elm Ulmus minor Wych Elm U glabra hybrids are loosely termed Dutch elm U hollandica It is also known by the cultivar name Hollandica Nellie Bancroft considered Major either an F2 hybrid or a backcrossing with one of its parents 1 Ulmus hollandica Major Major Fettes Row EdinburghHybrid parentageU glabra U minorCultivar Major Originnorthern France and Low Countries as cultivar EnglandAccording to Richens the tree was a native of Picardy and elsewhere in northern France where it was known from the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries as ypereau or ypreau 2 Major was said to have been introduced to England from the Netherlands in the late seventeenth century as a fashion elm associated with William and Mary 3 the name Dutch Elm having been coined by Queen Mary s resident botanist Dr Leonard Plukenet 4 The epithet Major was first adopted by Smith in Sowerby s English Botany 36 t 2542 published in 1814 identifying the tree as Ulmus major Krussmann formally recognized the tree as the cultivar U hollandica Major in 1962 5 Richens 1983 states that Elwes and Henry in their account of Dutch Elm 1913 confused Dutch Elm with English 6 He gives no evidence but can only have been referring to Henry s statement that in many districts Major is the commonest tree in hedgerows 7 Richens was writing seventy years after Henry after a Dutch elm disease epidemic two world wars and decades of urbanisation and road widening Henry s statement was not necessarily a case of misidentification or an exaggeration Elwes and Henry s account of Dutch Elm remains a pioneering one 8 Contents 1 Description 2 Pests and diseases 3 Cultivation 4 Notable trees 5 Synonymy 6 In art 7 Accessions 7 1 North America 7 2 Europe 7 3 Australasia 8 Nurseries 8 1 Australasia 9 References 10 External linksDescription editIn areas unaffected by Dutch elm disease Major often attains a height of gt 30 m with a short bole and irregular wide spreading branches In open grown specimens the canopy is less dense than that of the English elm or Wych elm The bark of the trunk is dark and deeply fissured and like English elm forms irregular plates in mature specimens serving to distinguish it from the Huntingdon Elm latticed bark the other commonly planted U hollandica in the UK 9 The leaves are oval lt 12 cm long by 7 cm wide the top surface dark green and glossy with a long serrated point at the apex 10 The red apetalous perfect wind pollinated flowers are produced in spring in large clusters of up to 50 The obovate samarae are up to 25 mm long by 18 mm broad The cultivar may be distinguished from other elms by the corky ridges which on mature trees occur only on the epicormic branches of the trunk The bark of branches and twigs is otherwise smooth 11 On immature trees and suckers the corky bark is more pronounced Elwes and Henry state that the seed is rarely viable Bancroft that it is always sterile 1 The tree suckers profusely from roots 2 12 7 In southern Britain Major is commonly found as a sucker sometimes in mixed hedgerows with English Elm large Dutch Elm sucker populations have been found in south west Wales Cornwall and along the Channel coast The suckers of Dutch Elm are sometimes confused with those of English Elm which may explain the widespread and random occurrence of the former in hedgerows in southern Britain Major comes into leaf some three weeks later than English elm and loses its leaves some three weeks earlier and when young its branching is straighter stouter and more open It is usually more vigorous than English elm 7 The larger tapering leaves predominantly corky bark and bold herringbone outline of Dutch Elm suckers also help to distinguish them from those of English elm nbsp Corky wings on epicormic branchlets nbsp Major bark and corky bole shoots nbsp Major leaves showing tapering apices nbsp Pressed Major leaves August nbsp Major samarae nbsp Major forming hedgerows Isle of ManPests and diseases editUlmus hollandica Major is very susceptible to Dutch elm disease Cultivation editThe Dutch elm quickly became popular in eighteenth century estate plantations in England survivors today being naturalised relics of this planting fashion but the tree was always rare in the Netherlands where from the eighteenth century hollandse iep Holland elm meant the widely planted hybrid Ulmus hollandica Belgica Belgian Elm 2 Ley 1910 noted that Major could be found scattered throughout the lowlands of England and Wales often in the company of English Elm but unlike the latter extended into mountain valleys in South Wales up to 1000 feet 11 Dutch elm was also planted in urban parks for example in the elm groves of Kensington Palace Gardens 7 and on account of its suckering habit and quick growth 12 was frequently planted as the elm component in mixed coastal shelter belts on the south coast in Cornwall South Wales the Isle of Man 13 14 and East Anglia 7 The tree was propagated and marketed in the UK by the Hillier amp Sons nursery Winchester Hampshire from 1949 with 101 sold in the period 1962 to 1977 when production ceased with the advent of the more virulent form of Dutch elm disease 15 16 Major was introduced to Ireland where the largest specimens were at Marlfield County Tipperary 7 renowned for its elms 17 It was also the predominant elm in Phoenix Park Dublin 7 Major is known to have been marketed as U montana gigantea in Poland in the 19th century by the Ulrich nursery 18 Warsaw and may still survive in Eastern Europe Ulmus suberosa major The Dutch cork barked elm was in US nurseries by the mid 19th century 19 Arnold Arboretum reported in 1915 that in the USA as in the UK by the 20th century Major was sometimes confused with English Elm 20 Major is grown at several arboreta and along the streets of Portland Oregon 21 The cultivar is also grown in parks and avenues in Australia notably in Melbourne 22 and in New Zealand 23 nbsp Dutch Elms Kensington Gardens London c 1890 nbsp Dutch Elms Phoenix Park Dublin c 1890 7 nbsp Major Withdean Court Road Brighton denser form the result of pruning nbsp Major fan headed after pollarding Royal Circus Edinburgh nbsp Major Isle of Man May 2007 nbsp Major as a windbreak elm Isle of ManNotable trees editOwing to Dutch elm disease mature trees are rare in the UK except in Brighton and Hove East Sussex The Level in Brighton alone has over 80 specimens in a double avenue Other examples including the TROBI Champion 27 m high by 139 cm d b h in 2009 after pollarding can be seen in the city along the London Road The specimen at Leeds Castle was at 38 m the tallest elm surviving in Britain until it blew down in 2000 24 There are also good examples in Edinburgh along Fettes Row and one at the intersection of Royal Circus and Circus Place bole girth 2 5 m while a single mature Major survives at the extreme east end of East Princes Street Gardens 2015 25 A 2011 study by Dr Max Coleman of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh has confirmed that many thousands of mature Major survive in the Isle of Man 13 14 26 Many old trees survive 2018 in New Zealand notably in Auckland the finest considered to be the specimen found outside the Ellerslie Racecourse 23 nbsp Major Botanical Gardens Christchurch NZ 2004 nbsp Old Major near Scott Monument Edinburgh showing autumn colourSynonymy editUlmus hollandica Hollandica Richens 2 Ulmus montana glabra var gigantea Hort Kirchner 1 in Petzold 2 amp Kirchner Arboretum Muscaviense 564 1864 Ulmus montana glabra var macrophylla fastigiata Hort Nicholson Kew Hand List Trees amp Shrubs 2 141 1896 Ulmus hollandica Ypreau Richens 2 In art editThe open irregular branching of Major appears in Constable s Salisbury Cathedral from the bishop s grounds 1823 27 and in G N Wright s Wellington Monument Phoenix Park c 1830 see Cultivation The elm grove in Kensington Gardens London said by Elwes to have been Major 7 was illustrated by numerous artists but most effectively in Richens view 28 by Seymour Haden in his etching Kensington Gardens 1860 29 The more regular canopy sometimes found in Major appears in a botanical drawing in Loudon s Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannicum 1854 nbsp Dutch Elm Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop s grounds 1823 nbsp Dutch Elm by the Wellington Monument Phoenix Park Dublin by G N Wright c 1830 nbsp Dutch Elm grove Kensington Gardens etching by Seymour Haden 1860 nbsp Ulmus major the greater or Dutch cork barked elm Arboretum et Fruticetum Britannicum 1854 Accessions editNorth America edit Arnold Arboretum US Acc no 241 98 from cultivated material Longwood Gardens US Acc no L 0600 unrecorded provenance Morton Arboretum US Acc nos 1114 25 338 46 Europe edit Brighton amp Hove City Council UK NCCPG Elm Collection Over 1000 specimens inc TROBI champion 3 Grange Farm Arboretum Sutton St James Spalding Lincolnshire UK Acc no 1099 Royal Botanic Gardens Wakehurst Place UK Acc no 1973 20146 Australasia edit Avenue of Honour Ballarat Australia As Hollandica Avenue of Honour Bacchus Marsh Australia Christchurch Botanic Gardens Christchurch New Zealand Details not known Eastwoodhill Arboretum 4 Gisborne New Zealand 10 trees details not known Nurseries editAustralasia edit Established Tree Planters Pty Ltd Wandin Victoria Australia 5 References edit a b Bancroft H 1934 Notes on the status and nomenclature of the British elms V Elms generally accepted as hybrids the Dutch Elm The Gardeners Chronicle 96 298 299 a b c d e Richens R H 1983 Elm p 53 54 also 33 42 Cambridge University Press 1983 Rackham Oliver 1976 Trees and Woodland in the British Landscape J M Dent London Armstrong J V Sell P D 1996 A revision of the British elms Ulmus L Ulmaceae the historical background Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 120 39 50 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 1996 tb00478 x Retrieved 26 October 2017 Krussmann Johann Gerd 1962 Handbuch der Laubgeholze Vol 2 p 537 Richens R H Elm Cambridge 1983 p 282 a b c d e f g h i Elwes Henry John Henry Augustine 1913 The Trees of Great Britain amp Ireland Vol 7 pp 1883 1887 Bancroft H 1934 Notes on the status and nomenclature of the British elms V Elms generally accepted as hybrids the Dutch Elm The Gardeners Chronicle 96 298 299 Mitchell A 1974 A Field Guide to the Trees of Britain amp Northern Europe Collins London ISBN 0 00 219213 6 Photograph of Major leaves ulmen handbuch de a b Ley Augustin 1910 Notes on British elms Journal of Botany British and Foreign 48 65 72 Retrieved 8 February 2018 a b Bean W J 1981 Trees and shrubs hardy in Great Britain 7th edition Murray London a b Lee Jimmy July 2012 Dutch Elm Disease 2012 PDF Biodiversity Matters Isle of Man Government 5 3 a b Coleman M A Hara S W Tomlinson P R Davey P J 2016 Elm clone identification and the conundrum of the slow spread of Dutch Elm Disease on the Isle of Man New Journal of Botany 6 2 3 79 89 Hillier amp Sons 1977 Catalogue of Trees amp Shrubs Hillier Ampfield UK Hillier amp Sons Sales inventory 1962 to 1977 unpublished Trees of Marlfield Lake clonmelonline com 2012 01 trees of marlfield lake Ulrich C 1894 Katalog Drzew i Krezewow C Ulrich Rok 1893 94 Warszawa Hovey amp Co Boston Mass Catalogue of ornamental trees amp shrubs evergreens and climbing plants 1855 p 5 Arnold Arboretum Bulletin of Popular Information Vol 1 N S No 14 23 July 1915 p 56 Dutch Elm in Portland Oregon portlandoregon gov Dutch Elm avenue planted 1907 in Caulfield Park Melbourne caulfieldpark com avenue of elms html a b Wilcox Mike Inglis Chris 2003 Auckland s elms PDF Auckland Botanical Society Journal Auckland Botanical Society 58 1 38 45 Johnson O 2011 Champion Trees of Britain amp Ireland p 169 Kew Publishing Kew London ISBN 9781842464526 Major in E Princes St Gdns Edinburgh edinburgh gov uk prolandscapermagazine com 24 February 2017 Richens R H Elm Cambridge 1983 p 173 p 293 note 28 Richens R H Elm Cambridge 1983 p 150 Seymour Haden etching Kensington Gardens 1860 artsy netExternal links editJobling amp Mitchell Field Recognition of British Elms Forestry Commission Booklet Herbarium specimen WAG 1847104 Botany catalogues Naturalis Biodiversity Center Sheet labelled Ulmus x hollandica Major Constitution Ave Washington D C 1977 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ulmus hollandica 27Major 27 amp oldid 1175091870, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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