Online Encyclopedia

BART SIR JOHN BLUNDELL MAPLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 664 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

BART
See also:
SIR JOHN BLUNDELL MAPLE
  . (1845-1903),
See also:
English business magnate, was born on the 1st of March 1845 . His
See also:
father, John Maple (d . 1900), had a small furniture
See also:
shop in
See also:
Tottenham Court Road,
See also:
London, and his business began to develop about the time that his son entered it . The
See also:
practical management soon devolved on the younger Maple, under whom it attained
See also:
colossal dimensions . The
See also:
firm became a limited liability
See also:
company, with a capital of two millions, in 189o, with Mr Maple as chairman . He entered parliament as Conservative member for
See also:
Dulwich in 1887, was knighted in 1892, and was made a
See also:
baronet in 1897 . He was the owner of a large
See also:
stud of
See also:
race-horses, and from 1885 onwards won many important races, appearing at first under the name of " Mr Childwick.” His public benefactions included a hospital and a recreation ground to the city of St Albans, near which his residence, Childwickbury, was situated, and the rebuilding, at a cost of more than £150,000, of University College Hospital, London . He died on the 24th of November 1903 . His only surviving daughter married in 1896 Baron von Eckhardstein, of the German
See also:
Embassy . ai G2sE 00°°30 .7 m ,•s;, 7.49 B — 7.46 . •A,', ` W Q 7.42 5 • ~` .

7.60 2$ao' 7.60 e~F d8 (

tool Perspective Zenithal ' MAPLE, in botany . The maple (0 . E. mapel-treow, mapulder) and sycamore trees are
See also:
species of Acer, of the order Acerineae . The genus includes about sixty species, natives of
See also:
Europe, North
See also:
America and
See also:
Asia, especially the Himalayas,
See also:
China and
See also:
Japan . Maples are for the most
See also:
part trees with opposite, long-stalked, palmately lobed leaves . The flowers are in fascicles, appearing before the leaves as in the Norway maple, or in racemes or panicles appearing with, or later than, the leaves as in sycamore . Some of the flowers are often imperfect, the stamens or
See also:
pistil being more or less aborted . The fruit is a two-winged "
See also:
samara." The genus was represented in the
See also:
Tertiary
See also:
flora of Europe, when it extended into the polar regions; nineteen species have been recorded from the
See also:
Miocene strata of Oeningen in
See also:
Switzerland . The
See also:
common maple, A. campestre, is the only species indigenous to
See also:
Great Britain . This and the sycamore were described by Gerard in 1597 (Herball, p . 1299), the latter being " a stranger to England." Many species have been introduced, especially from Japan, for ornamental purposes . The following are more especially worthy of
See also:
notice .

Acer campestre, the common maple, is common in hedgerows, but less often seen as a

tree, when it is seldom more than 20 ft. high, though in sheltered situations 30 ft. or more is attained . The leaves are generally less than 2 in. across, and the five main lobes are blunter than in the sycamore . The clusters of green flowers terminate the young shoots and are erect; the two wings of the fruit spread almost horizontally, and are smaller than in the sycamore . It occurs in
See also:
northern Europe, the
See also:
Caucasus, and northern Asia . The wood is excellent fuel, and makes the best
See also:
charcoal . It is compact, of a
See also:
fine grain, sometimes beautifully veined, and takes a high
See also:
polish . Hence it has been celebrated from antiquity for tables, &c . The wood of the roots is frequently knotted, and valuable for small
See also:
objects of
See also:
cabinet
See also:
work . The young shoots, being flexible and tough, are employed in France as whips . A. pseudo-platanus, the sycamore or great maple, is a handsome tree of
See also:
quick growth, with a smooth bark . The leaves are large, with finely acute and serrated lobes, affording abundant shade . The'flowers are borne in long pendulous racemes, and the two wings of the fruit are ascending .

It lives from 140 to 200 years . It is found

wild chiefly in wooded mountainous situations in central Europe . The wood when young is white, but old heartwood is yellow or brownish . Like the common maple it is hard and takes a high polish . It is much prized by wheelwrights, cabinet-makers, sculptors, &c., on the Continent; while knotted roots are used for
See also:
inlaying .
See also:
Sugar has been obtained from the
See also:
sap of this as from other species, the most being one
See also:
ounce from a quart of sap . The latter has also been made into wine in the Highlands of Scotland . It withstands the sea and mountain breezes better than most other
See also:
timber trees, and is often planted near
See also:
farm-houses and cottages in exposed localities for the
See also:
sake of its dense foliage . Its wood is valued in turnery for cups,
See also:
bowls and
See also:
pattern blocks . It produces abundance of seeds, and is easily raised, but it requires good and tolerably dry
See also:
soil; it will not thrive on stiff clays nor on dry sands or chalks . There are many varieties, the variegated and cut-leaved being the most noticeable . The lobed shape of its leaf and its dense foliage caused it to be confused with the true sycamore —Ficus sycamorus--of scripture .

A. platanoides, the Norway maple, is met with from Norway to

Italy,
See also:
Greece, and central and south Russia . It was introduced into Britain in 1683 . It is a lofty tree (from 40 to 70 ft.), resembling the sycamore, but with yellow flowers, appearing before the leaves, and more spreading wings to the fruit . There are several varieties . The wood is used for the same purposes as that of the sycamore . Sugar has been made from the sap in Norway and Sweden . Many varieties of A. palmatum, generally known as polymorphum, with variously laciniated and more or less coloured foliage, have been introduced from Japan as ornamental shrubs . The branches and corolla are
See also:
purple, the fruit woolly . The foliage of the typical form is bright green with very pointed lobes . It occurs in the central mountains of Nippon and near
See also:
Nagasaki . Beautiful varieties have been introduced under the varietal names, ampelopsifolium, atropurpureum, dissectum, &c . They are remarkable for the coppery purple tint that pervades the leaves and young growths of some of the varieties .

Other

See also:
Japanese species are A. japonicum, the varieties of which are among the most handsome of small deciduous shrubs; A. rufinerve, with the habit of the sycamore; A. distylum, bearing leaves without lobes; A. diabolicum, with large
See also:
plane-like leaves; and A. carpinifolium, with foliage resembling that of the hornbeam . A. saccharinum, a North
See also:
American species, the sugar, rock, or
See also:
bird's-eye maple, was introduced in 1735 . It sometimes attains to 70 or even over loo ft., more commonly 50 to 6o ft . It is remark-able for the whiteness of the bark . The wood is white, but acquires a rosy' tinge after exposure to
See also:
light . The grain is fine and close, and when polished has a silky lustre . The timber is used insteadof oak where the latter is scarce, and is employed for axle-trees and spokes, as well as for Windsor chairs, &c . It exhibits two accidental forms in the arrangement of the fibres, an undulated one like those of the curled maple (A. rubrum), and one of spots, which gives the name bird's-eye to the wood of this species . Like the curled maple, it is used for inlaying
See also:
mahogany . It is much prized for bedsteads, writing-desks, shoe-lasts, &c . The wood forms excellent fuel and charcoal, while the ashes are rich in alkaline principles, furnishing a large proportion of the potash exported from Boston and New York . Sugar is principally extracted from this species, the sap being boiled and the syrup when reduced to a proper consistence runs into moulds to form cakes .

Trees growing in

low and moist situations afford the most sap but least sugar . A cold north-west wind, with frosty nights and sunny days in alternation, tends to incite the flow, which is more abundant during the day than the
See also:
night . A thawing night is said to promote the flow, and it ceases during a south-west wind and at the approach of a storm; and so sensitive are the trees to aspect and
See also:
climatic variations that the flow of sap on the south and east side has been noticed to be earlier than on the north and west side of the same tree . The
See also:
average quantity of sap per tree is from 12 to 24 gallons in a season . A. rubrum, the red-flowering or
See also:
scarlet maple, is a
See also:
middle-sized tree, and was introduced in 1656 . The bright scarlet or dull red flowers appear before the leaves in March and
See also:
April . The wood, like that of other species, is applicable to many purposes—as for the seats of Windsor chairs, turnery, &c . The grain in very old trees is sometimes undulated, which suggested the name of curled maple, and gives beautiful effects of light and shade on polished surfaces . The most constant use of curled maple is for the
See also:
stocks of fowling-pieces and rifles, as it affords toughness and strength combined with lightness and elegance . The inner bark is dusky red . On boiling, it yields a purple colour which with sulphate of iron affords a black dye . The wood is inferior to that of the pre-ceding species in strength and as fuel .

Sugar was made from the sap by the

French Canadians, but the production is only
See also:
half as great as that from the sugar maple . In Britain it is cultivated as an ornamental tree, as being conspicuous for its flowers in spring, and for its red fruit and foliage in autumn . A. macrophyllum, a north-western American species, is a valuable timber tree . For a good account of the North American species see C . S . Sargent's Silva of North America, vol. ii . See also under SUGAR .

End of Article: BART SIR JOHN BLUNDELL MAPLE
[back]
MAP III
[next]
ABRAHAM MAPU (1808-1867)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.