County Champion

Planted: 1926

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County Champion

This tree can be found to the south of the South Loop.

Distribution:In mountain woods of Hubei Province of China, and also Korea
Planting Date:March 1926 from Hillier Nurseries, Romsey, Hampshire
Growth Habit: Small tree
Bark:Light grey, smooth with raised pores/lenticels (that allow gas exchange between atmosphere and internal tissue).  Branchlets downy when young becoming reddish brown and glabrous. Wrinkles and creases develop where branches bend.
Leaf:Glossy, opposite, 5-7 pinnate leaflets, 23 cm to 38 cm long. Ovate to ovate oblong, pointed at tip.
Flowers:Pungently fragrant terminal corymbs on current year’s growth in mid to late March. Small, unisexual flowers with 5 white sepals and yellow anthers.
Fruit:Red to purple-ish capsule of 4 or 5 carpels which split from the top to reveal shining black seed, the size of gun shot.
Tree size:Height 11 m and girth 126 cm
Uses:Oil from fruit sometimes used for cooking.
Plant Hunter:Specimen collected by William Daniell, a surgeon with British forces stationed in Tientsin, China in 1860-62. Seed collected by Ernest Wilson in 1905 China and 1907 Shandong province, China.
Introduction Date:Officially 1908.  Introduced to Royal Botanic Gardens Kew in 1907 from the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Boston, U.S., which had received the seed from Korea in 1905
 Comments:Rated County Champion by height and girth in April 2023 by The Tree Register.