18 NATL. ARBORETUM CONTRIB. NO. 3, U.S. DEPT. AGR. 



Bul. 6, pp. 23 and 28. 1953, in syn. = George E. Hart, Hart's 

 Pyramidalis, Pyramidalis Brilliantissima. 



BROOKS (Hume, Natl. Hort. Mag. 26(3) : 168. 1947)— leaves thick, wide, 

 dark green; fruit large, dependable annual bearer; select. 1942 by 

 M. Brooks, West Virginia University; discov. in the wild on Irvin 

 Farm near French Creek, Upshur County, West Virginia, at 1,700-foot 

 elev. H. G. Mattoon, Plants & Gardens 3(4): 237. 1947— very heavy 

 bearing with thick, sturdy twigs; large, thick, glossy green leaves; 

 fruit nearly % inch in diameter. Galle, Natl. Hort. Mag. 36(1): 22. 

 1957 — fairly coarse, upright; leaves dull, leathery, large, blunt. 



Brown (Galle, Natl. Hort. Mag. 36(1) : 22. 1957) — considered most com- 

 pact and glossiest leaved male of all J. opaca.= Jersey Knight, 

 Brown #9, Judge Brown No. 9. 



Brown #4 (Wister and others, Holly Soc. Amer. Bul. 6, p. 51. 1953; male 

 as doubtful name, without descr.). = Tom Brown B4. 



Brown #5 (Wister and others, Holly Soc. Amer. Bul. 6, p. 51. 1953, 

 without descr.) . 



Brown #7 (Wells Nurs., Red Bank, New Jersey, Cat. 1958) — tapering 

 pyramidal; leaves large, glossy, dark green; fruit oversized, oval, 

 orange red; best selection of the Brown Group. Misspelled as Brown 

 No. 7. 



Brown #9 (Hess Nurs., Mountain View, New Jersey, Cat. 1957, without 

 descr. as /. opaca mascula Brown #9) . = Jersey Knight, Brown, 

 Judge Brown No. 9. 



(Brown Group) A series of 32 numbered selections from the wild, not 

 all published or otherwise designated, and made about 1945 by the 

 Holly Research Committee of Rutgers University at Holly Hill, on the 

 estate of the late Judge Thomas Brown, Locust , New Jersey. 



CAIN (Hume, Natl. Hort. Mag. 26(3): 168. 1947)— leaves very dark 

 green, elliptic, cuneate, curved, small to medium with shallow, widely 

 separated spines; fruits regularly in great abundance, small, globose, 

 bright red; select, by W. C. Friersonnear Westminster, South Carolina, 

 at 900-foot elev. Wister and others, Holly Soc. Amer. Bul. 6, p. 23. 1953, 

 without descr. — discov. by F. Cain; in trod. 1947 by W. C. Frierson. 

 Annual bearing. 



Calloway (Proc. 31st Meeting Holly Soc. Amer. p. 11. 1961)— leaves 

 medium glossy; fruit yellow; discov. by W. A. Roach in open pasture 

 of Calloway Dairy near Calhoun, Louisiana. Holly Soc. Amer. Registr. 

 No. 9-61 by S. Solymosy. 



Camelot (M. Baron and G. Parmelee, New Rare Plants on Campus, 

 Michigan State Univ. List 17, p. 6, 1966. without descr.)— rec. 1965 from 

 O. Pride as a Grace Hybrid. 



CANARY (E. Dilatush, Robbinsville, New Jersey, Cat. 1953)— fruit yel- 

 low; in trod, about 1938-39 from western North Carolina by E. Dilatush. 



