Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn A Healing and Meditative Landscape | Page 10

Floras of Eastern North America & East Asia Written By Dennis Collins, Horticultural Curator Illustrations by Sarah Roche Stewartia ovata (above) and Stewartia koreana (below) 8 | Sweet Auburn By now, most people in New England are familiar with the Japanese Maple (Acer palmatum). It has become one of the staples in our region’s horticultural landscape. Perhaps some of us only vaguely sense that it’s related to our native Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum) or the now ubiquitous “invasive species” the Norway Maple (Acer platanoides). We generally leave it to the botanical taxonomists to keep track of the details about what makes them different. One hundred and fifty years ago, when the Japanese Maple first arrived in Boston as an exotic novelty, our local authority on all things botanical, Professor Asa Gray—of the (now defunct) Cambridge Botanic Gardens at Harvard—was there to help everyone understand the significance of its arrival. In the mid-nineteenth century, hundreds of plant species that had never before been seen in the West were arriving here on merchant ships from Japan, Korea, and China. It was a pivotal moment in the history of horticulture in this country. Professor Gray, who later earned the title “father of American botany,” was in the right place at the right time. He made the most of his opportunity and delivered some profound insights on the origins and relationships of plant species around the world. Although Mount Auburn Cemetery received plants from a variety of sources during this period, it made a rather serious investment by commissioning its own shipload of plants from Tokyo in 1896. Some plants from that shipment can still be found in the landscape today. In the century and a half that followed, our landscape continued to benefit from plants that came here from Asia: Forsythia, Flowering Cherries, Hinoki Cypress, Quince, Azaleas, Magnolias, and Lilies, to name just a few. Today at Mount Auburn, the Asa