LTNTOH 
LHILL’ 
totters 
\ Bccdw Camps / 
>KalL,ns 
LFirdlliroo} 
K Lit,- 
Wold&f, 
[Otter 
to histories. 
ie*ers End 
UaqleysPp 
'eJavell J B 
rurtoi 
-C astle 
Cottaru 
ickling 
Lit .- 
London 
{hJbarnO 
Lujods 
xjOn^aA 
flush 
•mars 
^on 1 
bkaintRkk 
sactwell- 
UN mow 
Fig. 2 . — Map of part of N.W. Essex, showing district occupied by 
Primula elatior.^ 
in all parts. In gathering information on the distribution of 
this species I have met with much difficulty, as nearly every¬ 
one confuses it with the Hybrid Oxlip. I have, however, been 
able to verify most of the localities mentioned in the ‘ Flora,’ 
and to add many others. There are of course many small 
woods that are not specially mentioned in the following list, 
3i [The Club is indebted to Mr. Christy for this and the two following 
illustrations. —Ed.] 
174 On the Species of the Genus Primula in Essex. 
I should prefer the insertion of “ N.W.” in the place of the 
words “some parts of” Essex, and the statement that 
P. elatior grows at Springfield and Broomfield may be dis¬ 
missed at once; P. elatior does not exist in these localities, 
and the author of the ‘ Flora ’ was misinformed by his 
correspondents. I have marked out on the map the district 
in Essex in which P. elatior grows. It occupies this area, 
growing, generally in great abundance, in all the woods in 
some parts, and in most of the woods and in a few meadows 
