2498 ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PART III. 



London. Id Bedfordshire, at Southill, it is 3S ft. high, diameter of the trunk 2 ft. 3 in., and of the 

 head 27 ft. In Berkshire, at White Knights, 34 years planted, it is 30ft. high. In Cambridgeshire, 

 at Wimpole, 100 years old, it is 32ft. high, diameter of the trunk 3 ft. In Essex, at Braybroke, 

 51 fears planted, it is 39 ft high ; ;.t Hylands, lo years planted, it is 16 ft. high. In Gloucestershire, 

 at uoddington Park, 27 years' planted, it is IS ft. high. In Hertfordshire, at Cashiobury, 30 years 

 planted, it is 34ft high, in Leicestershire, at Elvaston Castle, 55 years planted, it is 31 ft. high, 

 diameter of the trunk 1 ft. S in. ; at W'hatton House, 20 years planted, it is 24 ft. high. In Notting- 

 hamshire, at Clumber Park, it is S6ft. high. In Staffordshire, at Holleston Hall, 50 years planted, 

 it is S9 ft. high. In Suffolk, at Finborough Hall, 70 years planted, it is 60 ft. high ; at Stretton Rec- 

 tory, 9Q years old, it has three stems, the t otal circumference of which is 11 ft. In Warwickshire, 

 at Combe Abbey, 60 years planted, it is 41 ft. high, diameter of the trunk 1 ft. 9 in., and of the head 

 2 ' ft In Worcestershire, at Croome, 50 years planted, it is 65ft. high, the diameter of the trunk 

 1 tt. 8 in., and of the head 30ft In Yorkshire, at Hackress, 40 years planted, it is 14 ft. high. — In 

 Scotland In the environs of Edinburgh, at Gosford House, 80 years planted, it is 15 ft. high ; at 

 Dalhousie Castle, 20 years planted, it is Ifi ft. high. In Berwickshire, at the Hirsel, 30 years planted, 

 it is 21 ft high. In Haddingtonshire, at Tyningham, 23 years planted, it is 17 ft. high. In Rox- 

 burghshire, at M into, 65 years planted, it is 35 It. high. In Aberdeenshire, at Thainston, it grows 

 about il in. a year. In Perthshire, at Tavmouth, 50 years planted, it is 36 ft. high. In Ross-shire, 

 at Brahan Castle, 5(1 years planted, it is 54 ft. high. In Stirlingshire, at Blair Drummond, it is 40 ft. 

 high. — In Ireland. In the environs of Dublin, in the Glasnevin Botanic Garden, 30 years planted, it 

 is 16ft high. In Fermanagh, at Florence Court, 50 years planted, it is 40 ft. high. In Louth, at 

 Oriel Temple, 35 years planted, it is 2d ft. high. — In France. At Paris, in the Jardin des Plantes, 

 35 years planted, it is 52 ft high, the diameter of the trunk 1 ft., and of the head 25 ft. ; in the 

 Botanic Garden at Toulon, 36 years planted, it is 29 It. high. At Avranches, in the garden of M. 

 Brunei. '.9 years planted, it is 24 ft. high, the diameter of the trunk 1 ft. 6 in., and of the head 20 ft. 



— In Hanover, in the Gottingen Botanic Garden, 50 years planted, it is 40 ft. high. — In Bavaria, in 

 the Botanic Garden. Munich, 20 years planted, it is 12 ft. high. — In Austria, at Vienna, in the Uni- 

 versity Botanic Garden, 30 years planted, it is 25ft. high; at Laxenburg, 30 years planted, it 



is 20 ft. high ; at Briick on the Ley t ha, 45 years planted, it is 30 ft. high In Prussia, at Berlin, at 



Sans Souci, 90 years planted, it is 40 ft. high ; in the Pfauen Insel, 40 years planted"^ is 26 ft. high. 



— In Sweden, in the Botanic Garden at Lund, it is 22ft. high — In Italy, at Monza, 29 years 

 planted, it is 20 ft. high. 



Commercial Statistics. Price of berries, in London, Is. 3d. per quart ; of 

 seedling plants, 5s. a hundred; plants from 12 in. to 18 in. high, 75s. a 

 hundred. At Bollwyller, plants in pots are 1 franc each; or seedlings, one 

 year transplanted, per hundred, 30 francs. At New York, plants are 25 

 cents each. 



f. 6. J. bermudia v na L. The Bermudas Cedar. 



Identification. Lin. Sp. PL, 1471.; Reich., 4. p. 276. ; Herm. Lugdb., t. 347.; Raii Hist, 1414. 

 Synonyme. Cedrus Bermuda? Bay's Letters, p. 171. 



Engravings. Herm. Lugdb., t. 347. ; and our fig. 2358. of the natural size, from a young plant at 

 Messrs. Loddiges's. 



Spec. Char. Leaves in threes ; upper in pairs, decurrent, awl-shaped, 

 spreading, acute. (Willd.) A tall tree, a native of the Island of Bermudas. 

 Introduced before 1683, and flowering in May and June. 



Descriptimi, Sfc. A lofty tree, with loose, thin, reddish bark, and very fra- 

 grant wood. When young, it has acutely pointed leaves, 

 which spread open, and are placed by threes round the branches; 

 but, as the trees advance in age, their leaves alter, and become 

 very short ; lying over each other by fours round the branches, 

 K) as to make the brunchlets appear 4-cornered. The berries 

 are produced towards the end of the branches, and are of a 

 dark red colour, inclining to purple. According to Hay's 

 Litters, p. 171., it was introduced in 1683; but, in Marty n's 

 /, it is said that it was first cultivated by the Earl of 

 Clarendon, in 1700. The wood is much used, in the West 

 Indie-., for wainscoting, and different articles of furniture, as 

 it is never attacked by cockroaches or other insects. It is 

 imported into England for the purpose of making black-lead 

 pencil- ; and ihftvingl of it, under the name of cedar shavings, 2358 



are used to put in drawers, &c, to keep away moths. The tree, being rather 

 tender in the climate of London, is not frequent in collections ; but plants 

 may be obtained in the principal nurseries. The largest specimen which we 

 i . at I Icndon Rectory, where it is about 2 ft. high. There are plants 

 in the Fulharn .Nursery, and in the I lorticultural Society's Garden. Price of 

 plants, in the London nurseries, 2i.6d. each. At Bollwyller and New York, it 

 house plant. 



