The
Field Elm
''Ulmus minor'' Mill., the field elm, is by far the most polymorphic of the European species, although its taxonomy remains a matter of contention. Its natural range is predominantly south European, extending to Asia Minor and Iran; its northern ...
cultivar ''Ulmus minor'' 'Plotii', commonly known as Lock Elm or Lock's Elm
(its vernacular names), Plot's Elm
or Plot Elm,
and first classified as ''Ulmus sativa''
Mill. var. ''Lockii'' and later as ''Ulmus plotii'' by
Druce in 1907-11 (see 'Etymology'), is
endemic mainly to the
East Midlands
The East Midlands is one of nine official regions of England at the first level of ITL for statistical purposes. It comprises the eastern half of the area traditionally known as the Midlands. It consists of Leicestershire, Derbyshire, Li ...
of England, notably around the
River Witham in
Lincolnshire, in the
Trent Valley
The Trent is the third-longest river in the United Kingdom. Its source is in Staffordshire, on the southern edge of Biddulph Moor. It flows through and drains the North Midlands. The river is known for dramatic flooding after storms and ...
around
Newark-on-Trent,
and around the village of
Laxton, Northamptonshire.
Ronald Melville suggested that the tree's distribution may be related to river valley systems, in particular those of the Trent, Witham,
Welland, and
Nene.
Two further populations existed in
Gloucestershire.
It has been described as Britain's rarest native
elm, and recorded by
The Wildlife Trust
The Wildlife Trusts, the trading name of the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts, is an organisation made up of 46 local Wildlife Trusts in the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man and Alderney. The Wildlife Trusts, between them, look after more than 2 ...
as a nationally scarce species.
[Plot’s Elm (Ulmus Plotii)](_blank)
Wildlifebcnp.org. Retrieved on 2012-03-22.
As with other members of the Field Elm group, the taxonomy of Plot Elm has been a matter of contention, several authorities, notably Professor
Clive A. Stace
Clive Anthony Stace (born 1938) is a British botanist and botanical author. He studied at King's College London, graduated from University of London in 1959 and then studied at the Natural History Museum, London. He was awarded a PhD in 1963. ...
in ''New Flora of the British Isles'' (2010),
Stace, C. A.
Clive Anthony Stace (born 1938) is a British botanist and botanical author. He studied at King's College London, graduated from University of London in 1959 and then studied at the Natural History Museum, London. He was awarded a PhD in 1963. ...
(1997). ''New Flora of the British Isles'', 2nd edition. Cambridge University Press. recognizing it as a species in its own right. It is as ''U. plotii''
Druce that the specimens held by the
Royal Botanic Gardens at
Kew and
Wakehurst Place are listed.
R. H. Richens
Richard Hook Richens (1919–1984) was a botanist and an early researcher in Computational Linguistics.
Botany
R. H. Richens was the Director of the Commonwealth Bureau of Plant Breeding and Genetics (part of the Commonwealth Agricultural Bur ...
, however, contended (1983) that it is simply one of the more distinctive clones of the polymorphous ''
Ulmus minor'', conjecturing that it arose as an ''U. minor'' sport and that its incidence in the English Midlands may have been linked to its use as a distinctive marker along
Drovers' roads.
After Richens had challenged the species hypothesis, the tree was the subject of a study at the
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh by Dr Max Coleman (2000), which showed that trees a perfect fit with the 'type' material of Plot elm were of a single clone (genetically identical to each other).
Arguing in a 2002 paper that there was no clear distinction between species and subspecies, and suggesting that known or suspected clones of ''U. minor'', once cultivated and named, should be treated as
cultivars, Coleman preferred the designation ''U. minor'' 'Plotii'
to ''U. minor'' var. ''plotii'', a form used in late 20th-century publications.
Alfred Rehder
Alfred Rehder (4 September 1863 in Waldenburg, Saxony – 25 July 1949 in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts) was a German-American botanical taxonomist and dendrologist who worked at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. He is generally reg ...
considered ''Ulmus Plotii''
Druce to be synonymous with
Jonathan Stokes' ''Ulmus surculosa argutifolia'' which was located at Furnace Mill near
North Wingfield, Derbyshire,
[Possibly a misprint for Furnace Hill, near North Wingfield.] before 1812.
Earlier still, a herbarium specimen labelled ''Ulmus angustissima'' collected in the 1670s by Edward Morgan, the Welsh botanist referred to by
Evelyn
Evelyn may refer to:
Places
* Evelyn, London
*Evelyn Gardens, a garden square in London
* Evelyn, Ontario, Canada
* Evelyn, Michigan, United States
* Evelyn, Texas, United States
* Evelyn, Wirt County, West Virginia, United States
* Evelyn ...
in his
''Diary'' and colleague of
Thomas Johnson, was identified by Druce in 1919 as ''Ulmus plotii''.
[Druce, G. C., 'Edward Morgan's Hortus Siccus', in ''The Bodleian Quarterly Record'', vol. 2, nos.13-24, 1917-1919 (Oxford, 1920), pp.227-228](_blank)
/ref> Morgan's source location is not recorded; the nearest Plot Elm (recorded in the 20th century) to his North Wales home was in Shropshire.
Augustine Henry, though he equated the elm with Druce's, miscalled it Goodyer's Elm ( ''U. minor'' 'Goodyeri'). The trees John Goodyer
John Goodyer (1592–1664) was a botanist who lived in south-east Hampshire, England, all his life. He amassed a large collection of botanical texts which were bequeathed to Magdalen College, Oxford, and translated a number of classical texts ...
discovered were near the south coast at Pennington, Hampshire, some 200 miles away from centre of distribution of 'Plotii' and very dissimilar in structure.[White, J. & More, D. (2002). ''Trees of Britain & Northern Europe''. Cassell's, London.][Chatters, C. (2009) ''Flowers of the Forest – Plants and people of the New Forest National Park''. Wildguides, Old Basing, England. ]
Description
Richens stated that "a unilateral habit is the prime diagnostic feature of ''U. plotii''." This habit of branching tends to make Plot appear narrow from some angles. Before the advent of Dutch elm disease, this slender, "loose-habited", monopodial tree grew to a height of and was chiefly characterized by its cocked crown comprising a few short ascending branches. Richens[Richens, R. H. (1968). The correct designation of the European field elms. ''Feddes Repertorium'' 79: 1
–2.] likened its appearance to an ostrich feather, and noted "a general tendency for shoots to continue growth as long shoots". Melville noted that Plot "is unusually variable in the type of shoot produced on normal branches of the crown. In some seasons trees produce occasional branches bearing only semi-long shoots – i.e. shoots intermediate in character between typical short-shoots and the long extension shoots." These semi-long shoots (also known as "proliferating short-shoots") have smaller, more rounded, more coarsely toothed leaves. The bark remains smooth for several years. A few longer lower branches were often a feature of its profile; the form of old trees will have depended on whether or not these survived cropping and pruning. The obovate to elliptic acuminate leaves are small, nearly equal at the base, rarely > 4 cm in length, with comparatively few marginal teeth, usually < 70; the upper surfaces dull, with a scattering of minute tubercles and hairs. The samarae rarely ripen, but when mature are narrowly obovate, < 13 mm in length, with a triangular open notch.
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii'.jpg, 'Plotii', Banbury, 1911 (two contiguous trees)
File:Mobot31753002319710 0347.jpg, ''Ulmus plotii'' Druce leaves, ''The Gardeners' Chronicle'', 1912
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii' Laxton Northamptonshire.jpg, Young Plot Elm, Laxton, Northamptonshire, 2015
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii', Laxton.jpg, Plot Elm, Laxton, Northamptonshire (upper stem missing)
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii'. Scamblesby, Lincolnshire. (December).jpg, Young 'Plotii' in winter, Scamblesby
__NOTOC__
Scamblesby is a village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district from Lincolnshire, England. It is situated south-west from Louth, on the A153 road, and within the Lincolnshire Wolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural B ...
, Lincolnshire
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii' foliage in may. Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire.jpg, Plot foliage in mid-May, Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire
Image:Ulmus_minor_'Plotii',_Laxton._Bark_of_tree.jpg, Plot bark, Laxton, Northamptonshire
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii' bark, Caythorpe. Notts.jpg, Young Plot bark, Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire
File:Ulmus minor 'Plotii'. Main Road, Utterby, Lincolnshire (7).jpg, Plot foliage and young bark, Utterby
Utterby is a village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated on the A16 road, south from Grimsby and north from Louth.
Utterby railway station (or Utterby Halt), on the line between Grimsby and ...
, Lincolnshire
File:Ulmus minor 'Plotii'. Main Road, Utterby, Lincolnshire (9).jpg, Plot foliage, showing semi-long shoots, Utterby, Lincolnshire
Stokes' ''Ulmus surculosa argutifolia'' (1812) 'bright-leaved twiggy elm' considered by Rehder a description of the elm pre-dating Druce's by a century,[ was a tree with erect stem and branches throughout its length, and with small elliptic leaves, scabrous above and villose beneath, 1 to 2.5 inches long, that narrowed at the base, with margins meeting petiole nearly opposite each other.][
]
Pests and diseases
'Plotii' is very susceptible to Dutch elm disease.
Etymology
The tree was first classified by the Oxford botanist George Claridge Druce in 1907-11, who found examples at Banbury and Fineshade, Northamptonshire, and published descriptions with photographs. Druce named the tree for Dr Robert Plot, a 17th-century English naturalist. The older vernacular name 'Lock Elm', in use since at least 1742, is said to be an allusion to the difficulty in working its timber.[Gurney, R. (1958). ''Trees of Britain''. Faber & Faber, London.] Druce, however, wrote in 1913 that 'The wood is of very good quality, easy to work, and of a different texture from the Wych, Dutch, or English Elm, and has a general usefulness as a substitute for Ash or Wych Elm. The name Locks Elm can have no reference to any difficulty in working or dressing of the wood.' 'Lock' may be related to its use in boundaries, as 'loc' is Old English for enclosure. Lock Elm may have been one of the plants used in witchcraft to open locks and reveal hidden treasure. Richens called the tree ''U. minor.'' var. ''lockii''. A. R. Horwood in his book ''British Wild Flowers – In Their Natural Haunts'', called it the 'Northamptonshire Elm'.
Bancroft referred to Plot's Elm as the 'East Anglian Elm', adding that it was often referred to as Wych Elm in the region;[Bancroft, H. (1934). Notes on the Status and Nomenclature of the British Elms. ''Gardeners' Chronicle'' XCVI.] however, she was almost certainly alluding to the Smooth-leaved Elm.
Cultivation
Plot-type elms had been noted as distinctive and were being cultivated in collections before they were botanically classified by Druce (1911), as evidenced by the two specimens at Westonbirt House
Westonbirt House is a country house in Gloucestershire, England, about southwest of the town of Tetbury. It belonged to the Holford family from 1665 until 1926. The first house on the site was an Elizabethan manor house. The Holfords r ...
[Jackson, A. Bruce, ''Catalogue of the Trees & Shrubs t Westonbirtin the Collection of the Late Lieut-Col. Sir George Lindsay Holford'' (London 1927), p.195; contains a second photograph.] (mature by 1912 when Augustine Henry photographed one of them for his ''Trees of Great Britain & Ireland'') and the tree at Eastington Park. Melville confirmed by field studies in the 1930s that Druce's specimens were typical ('the type'), but believing ''plotii'' to be a species and so to some extent variable he also admitted to Kew 'Plot Elms' that varied from the type. Cultivation in the decades that followed, influenced by Melville or sourced from Kew, allowed similar latitude. Following Coleman's findings about the type (2000) and his paper on British elms (2002), atypical Plot's Elms or 'Plot-type' elms are classified as ''Ulmus'' aff. 'Plotii'. These are very close to Plot's Elm and have a number of characteristics of the type, but their crowns are too broad and regular to match "true Plot". Melville himself, from the 1940s, had used the name ''Ulmus'' aff. ''plotii'' for elms close to Plot but outside the range of his variable species.
Melville believed that the tree, scattered in distribution by the 20th century, was formerly more abundant. William Henry Wheeler
William Henry Wheeler (1832–1915) was an English civil engineer, author, architect, inventor and antiquarian.
Wheeler was born in Hammersmith in 1832. He read for a degree at King's College London, and in 1867 became a member of the Institutio ...
in his ''History of the fens of south Lincolnshire, being a description of the rivers Witham and Welland and their estuary'' (1897) – a Plot area – wrote: "The tree of the Fenland and the one which attains to a very large growth is the elm". An uncommon tree even before Dutch elm disease, 'Plotii' has also been affected by the destruction of hedgerows and by urban development within its limited range. No mature 'type' trees are known to survive. One of the last known stands of semi-mature Plot elms, the Madingley Road elms[Augustine Henry's hybrid ''Ulmus'' 'Mossii' was also present in Madingley Rd (''Trees of Great Britain & Ireland'', vol. 7, p.1865]
Kew Herbarium specimen K000852679
descended from those described by Elwes and Henry in 1913 and by Richens in 1960, was destroyed by the City Council of Richens's own Cambridge in road-widening c.2007–2014. Unlike other forms of Field Elm
''Ulmus minor'' Mill., the field elm, is by far the most polymorphic of the European species, although its taxonomy remains a matter of contention. Its natural range is predominantly south European, extending to Asia Minor and Iran; its northern ...
, 'Plotii' is not a prolific generator of root suckers, but it is not considered critically endangered. Conservation measures were drafted to preserve known stands and to encourage propagation, though it is not clear if any of these were implemented.
"A landscape of such trees," wrote Richens in 1956, "such as occurs in parts of northern Northamptonshire, is highly distinctive, and rather suggestive of a Japanese print." "The Plot Elm is a beautiful tree," agreed Gerald Wilkinson, with "a silhouette no broader than Wheatley Wheatley may refer to:
Places
* Wheatley (crater), on Venus
* Wheatley, Ontario, Canada
* Wheatley, Hampshire, England
* Wheatley, Oxfordshire, England
** Wheatley railway station
* Wheatley, South Yorkshire, England
* Wheatley, now Ben Rhydding, ...
's." Wilkinson regarded as a "lost opportunity" the failure of East Midlands councils to cultivate this local elm in preference to exotic plantsmen's varieties. "Unhappily, the plumes of ''U. plotii'' are no longer a common feature of the landscape of the Trent above Newark and the Witham above Lincoln. Elms are now 978few in these areas that were once the home of Plot Elm. A wartime shortage of wood, altered drainage levels, land clearance for power stations, and machine farming have all combined into the familiar pattern of short-term efficiency and long-term degradation."[Wilkinson's tree-photographs of Plot in ''Epitaph for the Elm'' (1978) show known forms; his leaves-photograph, however, from a mislabelled tree at Kew (p.72) and his leaf-illustration drawn from this (p.55) do not match type-Plot herbarium specimens (see External Links).]
Elms labelled 'Plotii' were included in botanical collections such as Kew Gardens, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, University of Dundee Botanic Garden (the two latter by Edward Kemp), and Belmonte Arboretum, Wageningen. In the UK 'Plot Elm' was propagated and marketed by the Hillier & Sons nursery, Winchester, Hampshire, from 1949, with 38 sold from 1965 to 1977, when production ceased.[Hillier & Sons (1977). ''Catalogue of Trees & Shrubs''. Hillier, Ampfield, UK.][Hillier & Sons ''Sales inventory 1962 to 1977'' (unpublished).] Its presence in the Hillier nursery suggests that it was also represented in the Hillier Arboretum in the mid-20th century. The tree is now only planted occasionally owing to its susceptibility to Dutch elm disease.[Plot elms, historic and current distribution]
/ref> It appears in National Elm Collection lists, but no specimen is known in the Brighton area (2015).
In continental Europe, 'Plotii' was distributed by the Späth nursery The Späth (often spelt ''Spaeth'') family created one of the world's most notable plant nurseries of the 19th and early 20th centuries. The nursery had been founded in 1720 by Christoph Späth but removed to the erstwhile district of Baumschulen ...
of Berlin from at least 1930 onwards, as ''U. minor'' Mill. (''U. sativa'' Moss), 'Goodyer-Rüster' 'Goodyer Elm' "a tall tree up to 30 m, of upright growth and ithpendulous ranchlets. Späth knew Elwes and Henry's 1913 work, with its photograph of one of the Westonbirt trees so named, so is likely to have sourced 'Plotii' either from Westonbirt or from one of Elwes and Henry's other source locations. (The real Goodyer's Elm was rediscovered by Melville in the later 1930s.) Rehder (1949) gives ''U. sativa'' Moss as a synonym of 'Plotii'. A specimen stood in Zuiderpark, The Hague, in the mid-20th century. The ''U. minor'' that stood in the Ryston Hall
Ryston Hall, Ryston, Norfolk, England is a 17th-century country house built by Sir Roger Pratt for himself. The house was constructed between 1669 and 1672 in the Carolean style. In the late 18th century, John Soane made alterations to the hous ...
arboretum, Norfolk, in the early 20th century may have been Plot Elm, referred to as ''U. minor'' in the leading UK tree survey of the day, Elwes and Henry (1913). Späth sent numerous elms to Ryston, but the date when he began supplying ''Ulmus minor'' Plot Elmis unknown. Three young specimens were reported (2014) from in a private garden at Seyne les Alpes, France.
In the USA, the " ''U. minor'' = ''U. sativa'' " introduced as "young grafted plants" to the Arnold Arboretum
The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University is a botanical research institution and free public park, located in the Jamaica Plain and Roslindale neighborhoods of Boston, Massachusetts. Established in 1872, it is the oldest public arboretum in N ...
, Massachusetts, c.1915, may have been Plot Elm, as the arboretum's July 1915 article on European Elms reporting this accession is based on Elwes and Henry's 1913 book and nomenclature. The young trees were established by 1918 and still present in 1922, the arboretum then considering them possibly the only specimens of this kind of elm in the US.
Notable trees
The type tree at Banbury was blown down in a gale around 1943; the timber was donated to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. A mature avenue of the 'type' tree stood at Newton on Trent
Newton on Trent is a village and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 389. The village is situated east of the River Trent, and approximately south from Ga ...
, Lincolnshire, in the early 20th century and a notable quantity grew by the river Tove
A river is a natural flowing watercourse, usually freshwater, flowing towards an ocean, sea, lake or another river. In some cases, a river flows into the ground and becomes dry at the end of its course without reaching another body of wate ...
at Towcester and was present until at least 1955. A large assemblage of Plot elm survives (2015) as a hedge of young trees near Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire. Two large trees survive near Calceby
Calceby is a small village in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated approximately west from the market town of Alford.It is in the civil parish of South Thoresby. Once much larger, Calceby is recorded in the ''Dom ...
, Lincolnshire (2016).
One of two late 19th-century specimens in the parkland of Westonbirt House
Westonbirt House is a country house in Gloucestershire, England, about southwest of the town of Tetbury. It belonged to the Holford family from 1665 until 1926. The first house on the site was an Elizabethan manor house. The Holfords r ...
, mature by 1912 when Henry photographed it for his ''Trees of Great Britain & Ireland'', was said by Elwes Elwes () is an English surname whose spelling over the years has included Helwish, Helewise, Helwys, Elwaiss, Elwaies and Elway. It may refer to:
* Columba Cary-Elwes (1903–1994), English Benedictine monk
* Elwes baronets, 1660–1787
* Eva Elwes ...
to be the largest-known tree of its kind in Britain. A clearer, winter photograph appears in Bruce Jackson's ''Catalogue of the Trees & Shrubs in the Collection of Sir George Lindsay Holford'' (1927). It was high and in girth in 1921. The 1921 girth is consistent (on circumference-growth estimates for elm) with a c.1820s planting date – that is, a decade after Stokes published his 1812 description, matching Westonbirt, and giving source-location, of his ''Ulmus surculosa argutifolia''.[ Elwes and Henry examined Druce's 'type' trees in Banbury and the elms of Madingley Road, Cambridge, as well as the Westonbirt specimens, and considered all three the same "species". Another notable specimen, described in ''Flora of Gloucestershire'' (1948) as ''U. plotii'' Druce, stood in the grounds of Eastington House, Ampney St Peter, Gloucestershire, till blown down c.1947.]
Image:Goodyer's elm at Weston Birt.jpg, Plot elm, Westonbirt
Westonbirt is a village in the civil parish of Westonbirt with Lasborough, in the district of Cotswold, in the county of Gloucestershire, England.
History
Westonbirt was recorded in the Domesday Book as ''Westone''.
See also
* Westonbirt Hou ...
, misidentified by Henry as Goodyer's Elm, 1912
File:Ulmus minor 'Plotii'. Madingley Road, Cambridge.jpg, Madingley Road elms, Cambridge, 2013[Madingley Rd elms, bioportal.naturalis.nl, specimen L.1582362](_blank)
/ref>
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii', near Calceby, Lincolnshire. July 2016.jpg, Two surviving 'Plotii', Calceby, Lincolnshire, July 2016 (died 2019)
Image:Plot elm hedge, Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire.jpg, Plot hedge, Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire
Image:Ulmus minor 'Plotii'. Ampney Crucis, Gloucestershire.jpg, 'Plotii', Ampney Crucis, Gloucestershire (2017), near Ampney St Peter, where the notable Eastington House 'Plotii' stood
Natural hybrids
Plot Elm hybridizes in the wild both with wych elm, to form ''U.'' × ''hollandica'' 'Elegantissima', and with ''U. minor'' to form '' Ulmus × viminalis''. Melville noted that within the limits of the tree's distribution, hybrids are more common than Plot Elm itself.
Hybrid cultivars
Elms of the '' Ulmus × viminalis'' group have been cultivated since the 19th century and have given rise to a hybrid cultivar of that name and to the cultivars 'Aurea', 'Marginata', 'Pulverulenta'. The 19th-century cultivar 'Myrtifolia' was considered by Melville to be a probable ''U. minor'' × ''U. minor'' 'Plotii' hybrid. The cultivar Wentworth Elm was identified by the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh as a hybrid of Huntingdon Elm
Huntingdon is a market town in the Huntingdonshire district in Cambridgeshire, England. The town was given its town charter by King John in 1205. It was the county town of the historic county of Huntingdonshire. Oliver Cromwell was born there ...
and Plot Elm, though Melville dismissed the specimen growing at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew as Huntingdon Elm
Huntingdon is a market town in the Huntingdonshire district in Cambridgeshire, England. The town was given its town charter by King John in 1205. It was the county town of the historic county of Huntingdonshire. Oliver Cromwell was born there ...
.[ The 20th-century dwarf elm cultivar 'Jacqueline Hillier' is thought to belong to the 'Elegantissima' group.] The cultivar 'Etrusca' was identified by Melville as a hybrid of ''U. glabra'' × ''U. minor'' 'Plotii'.[
]
In art, photography, and literature
George Lambert's landscape 'View of Dunton Hall, Lincolnshire', painted in 1739 near Tydd St Mary within the native range of Plot Elm, shows a narrow monopodial elm-like tree with short branches and cocked crown, that may be a rare representation of Plot Elm in art. Tydd St Mary is between the rivers Nene and Welland, by both of which Melville had noted the presence of Plot Elm.
file:George Lambert - View of Dunton Hall, Lincolnshire (1739).jpg, George Lambert, 'View of Dunton Hall, Lincolnshire' (1739)
file:'On The Leam'. Postcard - Hildesheime no. 5360.jpg, 'On The Leam'. Plot elm in a postcard by Hildesheime (c.1907)
Walter Hutchinson's four-volume ''Britain Beautiful'' (1920), a pictorial celebration of the British Isles that includes a number of elm landscapes, contains a photograph by Herbert Felton, FRPS (1888-1968) of a notable Plot elm by King's Mill, Stamford, Lincolnshire, c.1910, a tall undamaged double-stemmed tree, with long lateral boughs like a sparse-branched cedar of Lebanon.[Tall, broad Plot elm, Kings Mill, Stamford, Lincolnshire: Hutchinson, Walter, ''Britain Beautiful'' (London c.1920), Vol.3. p.1332](_blank)
/ref> Of such well-grown specimens Melville wrote: "In old age Plot is matched by no other elm for character and individuality".
A description in E. B. C. Jones
E. B. C. Jones (15 April 1893 – 30 June 1966) was the pen name of British writer Emily Beatrix Coursolles ("Topsy") Jones, whose novels focused on the social and psychological traumas of World War I, on large-family dynamics among young adul ...
's novel ''Morning and Cloud'' (1932) of asymmetrical elms in Hertfordshire
Hertfordshire ( or ; often abbreviated Herts) is one of the home counties in southern England. It borders Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire to the north, Essex to the east, Greater London to the south, and Buckinghamshire to the west. For govern ...
, where Plot Elm was present, may be a rare literary reference to 'Plotii'.
Accessions
;Europe
* Grange Farm Arboretum, Lincolnshire, UK. As ''U. minor'' 'Plotii'. Acc. no. 1081.
* Wakehurst Place Garden
Wakehurst, previously known as Wakehurst Place, is a house and botanic gardens in West Sussex, England, owned by the National Trust but used and managed by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. It is near Ardingly, West Sussex in the High Weald (g ...
, Wakehurst Place, UK, as ''U. plotii''. Acc. no. 1912-59402, donated by Augustine Henry, acc. nos. 1975–6181, 1975–6195, all collected by Ronald Melville.
* Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, UK, as ''U. plotii'', acc. no. 1969-16753, (planted 1958), donated by Melville.
;North America
* Bartlett tree nurseries. Acc. nos. 7771, 00–108, as ''U. plotii'', provenances not disclosed.
Synonyms
* ''Ulmus angustissima'': Edward Morgan MSS "Hortus siccus" (c.1672); Druce (1919)
*''Ulmus surculosa argutifolia'' Stokes.[
*''Ulmus sativa'' var. ''Lockii'' Druce.]
*''Ulmus minor'' Henry (non Miller).
*''Ulmus sativa'' Moss (non Miller).
*''Ulmus Plotii'' Druce.
*''Ulmus minor'' var. ''lockii'' Richens.
The Laxton court-case
It is not known whether what the Press called "lofty Italian elms" on the village green of Laxton, Northamptonshire (later identified as a Plot hub), the felling of which in 1937 caused a fracas between conservationists and police and led to a court-case, were ''U. plotii'', perhaps miscalled by outsiders by analogy with similarly narrow Italian poplar.[''Peterborough Standard'', Friday 12 November 1937; Northampton ''Mercury & Herald'', 12 November 1937]
Notes
References
External links
'Plot Elms' (''Ulmus minor'' 'Plotii'), www.plot-elms.co.uk
'The Plot Elm', resistantelms.co.uk
* http://www.ipgri.cgiar.org/Networks/euforgen/Networks/Scattered_Broadleaves/NHStrategies/UlmusSppConsStrategy.htm.
* ttps://secure.derby.gov.uk/flora/Flora.aspx?SpeciesID=2016 ''Ulmus minor'' var. ''plotii'', The Flora of Derbyshire, Derby City Council
Herbarium specimens
* ''Ulmus plotii'' (Druce's "type" specimen, Banbury, 1911)
* Sheet labelled ''U. plotii'' Druce (W. J. Stearn specimen, Shawbury
Shawbury is a village and civil parish in the English county of Shropshire. The village is northeast of the town of Shrewsbury, northwest of Telford and northwest of London.
The village straddles the A53 between Shrewsbury and Market Drayt ...
, Shropshire, 1942)
* ''Ulmus plotii'' (Melville's specimen, Banbury, 1946)
* ''U. plotii'', Zuiderpark, The Hague, long-shoots specimen, possibly juvenile (1954)
* Sheet labelled ''U. plotii'' Druce (R. C. L. Howitt specimen, Caythorpe, Nottinghamshire, 1957)
* Sheet labelled ''U. plotii'' Druce (Melville and Heybroek specimen, Banbury, Oxfordshire, 1958)
* Sheet labelled ''Ulmus'', Madingley Road, Cambridge (Heybroek specimen, 1960) (?)
Semi-juvenile leaves
* Sheet labelled ''U. plotii'' Druce (semi-juvenile tree; W. J. Stearn specimen, Lee Brockhurst
Lee Brockhurst, sometimes known locally as just Brockhurst, is a village and former civil parish, now in the parish of Moreton Corbet and Lee Brockhurst, in the Shropshire district, in the ceremonial county of Shropshire, England. It is situated ar ...
, Shropshire, 1942)
* ''U. minor'' Mill., "fitting description of ''U. plotii'' Druce (juvenile leaves; Westborough, Lincs., RBGE specimen, 1998)
* ''U. minor'' Mill., "fitting description of ''U. plotii'' Druce (juvenile leaves; Laxton, Northants., RBGE specimen, 1998)
* ''U. minor'' Mill., "fitting description of ''U. plotii'' Druce (juvenile leaves; Barrowby, Lincs., RBGE specimen, 1998)
{{Elm species, varieties, hybrids, hybrid cultivars and species cultivars , state=collapsed
Ulmus
Endemic flora of England
East Midlands
Field elm cultivar
Ulmus articles with images
Trees of Europe
Taxa named by George Claridge Druce
Garden plants of Europe
Ornamental trees