118 HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY OF TREES. PART I. 



eight by Conrad Loddiges ; six by Messrs. Lee and Kennedy ; 

 three by Fraser ; nineteen by Lyon ; one by the Kew Garden; 

 one by the London Horticultural Society ; one by Don of the 

 Cambridge Botanic Garden ; and one by Sir Abraham Hume. 

 Among the most interesting articles introduced during this de- 

 cade are, .Rosa multiflora, Cunninghams lanceolata, Juniperus 

 excelsa, Caprifolium japonicum, 7?6sa BankszVp, .Rhododendron 

 catawbiense (by Fraser), and Crat0e v gus Aronia. It is some- 

 what remarkable, that of such a number of species introduced 

 during this decade, the names of so few of the introducers should 

 : be known ; but it must be recollected that the means of intro- 

 ducing were, at this period, principally by packets of seeds sent 

 to the nurserymen by foreign correspondents, or by amateurs ; 

 and that, as several years must necessarily elapse between the 

 period of introduction, and that of flowering and naming, the 

 name of the collector who sent the seeds, or of the nurseryman 

 who first raised plants from them, is forgotten, or ceases to be of 

 the same interest. The case is different when living plants are 

 brought into the country, and it is, in truth, chiefly of the intro- 

 ducers of such that the names are known. 



From 1811 to 1820, three hundred and seventy-four trees 

 and shrubs were introduced, viz., forty-four by Messrs. Loddiges; 

 twelve by Lyon ; four by Lee and Kennedy ; three by Whitley 

 and Co. (among which was Spiraea bella in 1820); three by the 

 Horticultural Society (including Cotoneaster affinis in 1820); 

 two by Fraser (^bies Fraser/, and Yucca angustifolia in 1811); 

 one by Don of the Cambridge Botanic Garden ; one (the Rlbes 

 sanguineum, in 1817) by Archibald Menzies, Esq., who sailed 

 round the world with Captain Vancouver ; Genista procumbens 

 by Schleicher, a botanical collector in Switzerland ; one by 

 Knight of the Exotic Nursery, King's Road; and one (Mahomg 

 fascicularis) by A. B. Lambert, Esq. Among the most valuable 

 of the species introduced by Loddiges are, Azalea arborescens, 

 A. speciosa, and Rlbes aureum, in 1812; Symphoria racemosa, 

 Cytisus ruthenicus, Juniperus recurva, and Yucca tenuiflora, in 

 1817; ^Inus cordifolia (the most beautiful species of the genus), 

 in 1818; yfrmeniaca brigantiaca, and Quercus stellata, in 1819; 

 Cratse N gus melanocarpa, C. latifolia, C. Olivieridna, .Fraxinus 

 pannosa, F. platycarpa, F. lancea, Pinus excelsa, and A^bies Pichta, 

 in 1820. Among those introduced by Lyon are, MagnohVz pyra- 

 midata, in 1811; and Andromeda floribunda, Nyssa candicans, 

 Borya /igustrina, B. porulosa, B. acuminata, Virgilia lutea, and 

 CratseNgus apiifolia, in 1812. Among the fine plants recorded 

 as having been introduced in this decade, without mentioning 

 the names of the introducers, are, ^E'sculus glabra and pallida, 

 and Pavm hybrida, in 1812; Berberis sinensis, Cydonia ja- 

 ponica, and Daphne TTiymelae'a, in 1815; Planers ; Richard i 



