UA 
NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
SS 
Crataegus eatoniana Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 105. 51 (1906). 
Menands near Albany. 
Crataegus barbara Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 33 (1908). 
Brighton near Rochester. 
Crataegus pausiaca Ashe 
Ann. Carnegie Mus. I. 390 (1902). Sargent, Trees and Shrubs 1. 105. t. 53. 
Chapim ; also in eastern Pennsylvania. 
Crataegus desueta Sargent 
N. ¥. State Mus. Bul. 122. 84 (1908). 
Coopers Plains and Olean. 
Crataegus brownietta n. sp. 
Leaves obovate to ovate, acute, cuneate or rounded at the base, 
finely and often doubly serrate with straight glandular teeth, and 
slightly divided above the middle into short acuminate spreading 
lobes ; nearly fully grown when the flowers open in the last week of 
May and then yellow-green, roughened above by short white hairs 
and sparingly villose on the midribs and veins below, and at matur- 
ity thin, dark yellow-green and glabrous on the upper surface, still 
slightly villose on the lower surface, 4 to 4.5 cm long and 2.5 to 3 
cm wide, with slender midribs and four or five pairs of thin primary 
veins ; petioles slender, slightly wing-margined at the apex, sparingly 
villose early in the season, becoming glabrous, and more or less 
tinged with red in the autumn, I to 1.5 cm in length; leaves on vigor- 
ous shoots broadly ovate, acuminate, rounded at the wide base, sub- 
coriaceous, coarsely serrate, deeply lobed, often 7 to 8 cm long 
and wide, with stout winged petioles. Flowers on slender slightly 
hairy pedicels, in wide lax many-flowered sparingly villose corymbs, 
the lower peduncles from the axils of upper leaves; calyx-tube 
narrowly obconic, glabrous, the lobes long, slender, acuminate, 
usually glandular-serrate below the middle, glabrous on the outer, 
slightly villose on the inner surface, reflexed after anthesis ; stamens 
ten; anthers bright pink; styles three or four, surrounded at the 
base by a broad ring of long white hairs. Fruit ripening the end of 
