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ARBORETUM , the name given to that See also: part of a garden or See also: park which is reserved for the growth and display of trees
.
The See also: term, in this restricted sense, was seemingly first so employed in 1838 by J
.
C
.
Loudon, in his See also: book upon arboreta and fruit trees
.
Professor Bayley See also: Balfour, F.R.S., the Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden in See also: Edinburgh, has described an arboretum as a living collection of See also: species and varieties of trees and shrubs arranged after some definite method—it may be properties, or uses, or some other principle—but usually after that of natural likeness
.
The See also: plants are intended to be specimens showing the habit of the See also: tree or See also: shrub, and the collection is essentially an educational one
.
According to another point of view, an arboretum should be constructed with regard to picturesque beauty rather than systematically, although it is admitted that for scientific purposes a systematic arrangement is a .sine qua non
.
In this more general respect, an arboretum or woodland affords shelter, improves See also: local See also: climate, renovates See also: bad soils, conceals See also: objects unpleasing to the See also: eye, heightens the effect of what is agreeable and graceful, and adds value, See also: artistic and other, to the landscape
.
What Loudon called the " gardenesque " school of landscape naturally makes particular use of trees
.
By See also: common consent the arboretum in the Royal Botanical Gardens at See also: Kew is one of the finest in the See also: world
.
Its beginnings may be traced back to 1762, when, at the See also: suggestion of See also: Lord Bute, the duke of See also: Argyll's trees and shrubs were removed from Whitton Place, near See also: Hounslow, to adorn the princess of See also: Wales's garden at Kew
.
The duke's collection was famous for its cedars, pines and firs
.
Most of the trees of that date have perished, but the survivors embrace some of the finest of their kind in the gardens . The botanical gardens at Kew were thrown open to the public in 1841 under the directorate ofSee also: Sir See also: William
See also: Hooker
.
Including the arboretum, their
See also: total See also: area did not then exceed 11 acres
.
Four years later the pleasure grounds and gardens at Kew occupied by the See also: king of
See also: Hanover were given to the nation and placed under the care of Sir William for the express purpose of being converted into an arboretum
.
Hooker See also: rose to the occasion and, zealously reinforced by his son and successor, Sir See also: Joseph, established a collection which rapidly See also: grew in richness and importance
.
It is perhaps the largest collection of See also: hardy trees and shrubs known, comprising some 4500 species and botanical varieties
.
A large proportion of the total acreage (288) of the Gardens is monopolized by the arboretum
.
Of the more specialized public arboreta in the See also: United See also: Kingdom the next to Kew are those in the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh and the Glasnevin Garden in See also: Dublin
.
The collection of trees in the Botanic Garden at See also: Cam-See also: bridge is also one of respectable proportions
.
There is a small but very select collection of trees at See also: Oxford, the See also: oldest botanical
garden in See also: Great Britain, which was founded in 1632
.
In the United States the See also: Arnold Arboretum at See also: Boston ranks with Kew for See also: size and completeness
.
It takes its name from its donor, the friend of Emerson
.
It was originally a well-timbered park, which, by later additions, now covers 222 acres . Practically, it forms part of the park See also: system so characteristic of the city, being situated only 4 M. from the centre of population
.
There is a See also: fine arboretum in the botanical gardens at See also: Ottawa, in See also: Canada (65 acres)
.
On the continent of See also: Europe the classic example is still the Jardin See also: des Plantes in See also: Paris, where, however, system lends more of formality than of beauty to the general effect
.
The collection of trees and shrubs at Schonbrunn, near Vienna, is an extensive one
.
At Dahlem near Berlin the new Kgl
.
Newer Bolanlsclzer Garten has been laid out with a view to the accommodation of a very large collection of hardy trees and shrubs
.
There are now many large collections of hardy trees and shrubs in private parks and gardens throughout the See also: British Islands, the See also: interest taken in them by their proprietors having largely increased in See also: recent years
.
See also: Rich men collect trees, as they do paintings or books
.
They spare neither pains nor See also: money in acquiring specimens, even from distant lands, to which they often send out expert collectors at their own expense
.
This, too, the Royal Horticultural Society was once, wont to. do, with valuable results, as in the See also: case of See also: David See also: Douglas's remarkable expedition to See also: North See also: America in 1823-1824
.
It will be remembered that when the See also: laird of Dumbiedikes See also: lay dying (See also: Scott's See also: Heart of Midlothian, See also: chap. viii.) he gave his son one bit of advice which See also: Bacon himself could not have bettered
.
" Jock," said the old reprobate, " when ye hae naething else to do; ye may be aye sticking in a tree; it will be growing, Jock, when ye're sleeping." Sir Walter assures us that a ScotsSee also: earl took this See also: maxim so seriously to heart that he planted a large See also: tract of country with trees, a practice which in these days is promoted by the See also: English and Royal Scottish Arboricultural See also: Societies
.
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