Planted: 1933

This shrub is at the northern end of the Viburnum Walk.

Distribution:Native to central China.
Named in 1903 by Charles Henry Wright (1864-1941), An English botanist who worked in the laboratories of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew.
Planting Date:Purchased in 1933 from J Cheal and Sons, Lowfield Nurseries, Crawley.
Growth Habit:The shrub is semi-deciduous and grows to heights of 3 m to 5 m.
Leaf:The middle-green, simple leaves are opposite (lanceolate, serrulate and petiolate).
Flowers:Cymose corymbs of white five-stellate flowers in May and June.
Fruit:Produces red drupes in summer.
Toxicity:The plants are toxic.
Uses:An evergreen ornamental flowering shrub
Plant Hunter:Ernest Henry “Chinese” Wilson (1876 – 1930) a British plant collector and explorer who introduced a large range of about 2,000 Asian plant species to the West
Introduction Date: