1226 ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PART IIL. 
1049 

divided in bold sweeping lines. The foliage, though appearing late, was, and, indeed, still is, 
abundant and beautiful. But, some days before the 23d of July, 1824, its great southern limb 
was broken down by a high wind; and, although the ruin thus created was sufficiently deplorable, yet 
it was strikingly sublime.” (Lauder’s Gilpin, vol. i. p. 82. and §3.) A drawing of this tree, made 
by Mr. J. Steven, drawing-master, Elgin, has been kindly sent to us by William M‘Leod, Esq., 
from which fig. 1049. is an engraving to a scale of lin. to12ft. The branch broken off was about 
30 ft.long. The cavity in the interior of the trunk is of a regular cone-like shape, terminating in a 
point, and is 11ft. in diameter at the bottom, and 6ft. high. An ash tree in the churchyard of 
Kilmalie, in Lochaber, the parish church of the Lochiel family, burnt down during the troubles 
in 1746, was long considered as the largest and most remarkable tree in Scotland. Its remains were. 
measured in October, 1764, and, at the ground, the circumference was no less than 58 ft. (Walker’s 
Essays, p. 17.) This tree stood on a deep rich soil, only about 30 ft. above the level of the sea, 
in Lochiel, with a small rivulet running within a few paces of it. (Sang.) An ash tree near Bonhill 
House, in Dumbartonshire, which is surrounded with a sloping bank of earth, about 3ft. in 
height, measured in circumference, in September, 1784, at 4 ft. above the general surface of the 
ground, 34ft. lin. The proprietor has fitted up a room in the inside of it, with benches around, 
and glass windows. The diameter of the room is 8ft. 5in., and its roof is near 11 ft. in height. 
Sir T. D. Lauder informs us that 18 people can dine in this tree; that, though decayed at the 
heart, it lives in the bark, and formsa great deal of new wood; and that the trunk, which is a 
vast mass, is covered with fresh vigorous branches. (Lauder’s Gilpin, vol. i. p. 265.) A few yards from 
Cessford Castle, in Roxburghshire, there is a venerable ash tree, which measures in circumference, 
at the base, 27 ft. 8in. -An ash near the church of Logierait, in Perthshire, measured, at 4 ft. from 
the ground, in 1770, 16{t. The same tree, measured in March, 1812, was found to be, at breast 
high, 21 ft. Gin. in cireumference. (Samg.) An ash at Newbotile, in Mid-Lothian, standing east 
from the house, near the river, in the month of July, 1789, measured in circumference 11 ft. 4in. 
(Waitker’s Essays, p.12.) An ash in the Island of Loch Leven, in Fifeshire, in September, 1796, 
measured in circumference, at 4 ft. from the ground, 12ft. An ash at Lord Morton’s, near Aberdeen, 
in Fifeshire, measured in March, 1812, extended in length of bole 50 ft.; and in girt, at 4ft. high, 
10ft. 3in. An ash tree at Wemyss Castle, in Fifeshire, growing about 100 yards from the door of 
the Castle, measured, on the 13th of March, 1812, 35 ft. bole ; and in circumference, at 4 ft. from the 
ground, 15 ft. 3in. At Biel, in East Lothian, near the East Bridge, an aged ash was in girt, at 
breast height, July 28. 1812, 11 ft. 4 in. in circumference. An ash at Whittinghame,in East Lothian, 
was in girt, in 1819, 12 ft. Yin. (Sang’s Nicol, p. 547.) An ash at Yair, in Selkirkshire, measured, at the 
surface of the ground, 12 ft. 9in. in circumference. (Selkirkshire Rep., p. 284.) The Glammis ash 
tree at Castle Huntley, in Perthshire, measured in circumference, at the ground, 27 ft. ; and, at a yard 
high, 17 ft. (Stat. Account Scot., vol. xix. p. 467.) At the river of Blackburn, in the parish of Castle. 
town, in Roxburghshire, the trunk of an old ash measured in circumference 18 ft. (Jbid., vol. xvi. 
p.79.) An ash at Midstrath, in the parish of Bins, measured, at the ground, 20 ft. (Jbd., vol. ix. 
p. 129.) An ash near Deskford, in the county of Banff, called St. John’s Tree, measures in girt 
24 ft. 54in. (Tb7d., vol. viii. p. 36.) 
Recorded Ash Trees in Ireland. Arthur Young, in his Iv7sh Tour, mentions ash trees of 70 ft.and 
80 ft. in height, which were only of 35 years’ growth. ‘The stem of an ash on the banks of the Avon- 
more was about 14 ft round, and carried nearly the same dimensions for 18 ft. in height. An ash at 
Dunganston was 12 ft. round, with a clear trunk of 30 ft.,and arms extending nearly 90 ft. on each 
