Trees of Great Britain & Ireland

Henry John ELWES   |   Augustine HENRY

Item#: 82699 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Trees of Great Britain & Ireland
Trees of Great Britain & Ireland
Trees of Great Britain & Ireland

PIONEERING WORK IN ARBORICULTURE: ELWES AND HENRY’S EIGHT-VOLUME ILLUSTRATED TREES OF GREAT BRITAIN & IRELAND, 1906-13

ELWES, Henry John and HENRY, Augustine. The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. Edinburgh: [R. & R. Clark], 1906-13. Eight volumes (including Index). Tall, thick quarto, contemporary three-quarter dark blue crushed morocco gilt, raised bands, marbled endpapers, top edges gilt, uncut (original front wrappers bound in).

First edition of this comprehensive record of “every species of tree grown outdoors in the British Isles… which have attained a size which justifies their being looked on as timber trees,” with full-page photographs and detailed lithographs of each species— 412 plates altogether. Handsomely bound for Quaritch.

From 1900 to 1913, British botanist, naturalist and plant collector Henry Elwes produced his greatest work, The Trees of Great Britain and Ireland, in collaboration with botanist Augustine Henry. “Between them, they described every species of tree then grown outdoors in the British Isles, and recorded the finest specimens then to be seen. Most of these were visited and recorded personally, in which process Elwes wore out two motor cars” (Colesbourne Gardens). While Elwes was busy recording trees, Augustine Henry was in the process of changing careers from botanist to forester. “At a time when industrial forestry was totally undeveloped in the British Isles, he had realized its potential. After two years at the French School of Forestry in Nancy, he headed a new School of Forestry in Oxford in 1905… By the end of his career, he had become a world renowned forestry expert” (Marion Maxwell). His contribution to The Trees of Great Britain and Ireland “was unique insofar as he devised a system of identification based on leaves and twigs and on the position of buds to aid identification even in the absence of fruit and flowers” (Sheila Pim). “The work remains an invaluable source of information on trees and arboriculture” (Colesbourne). Nissen 595.

A beautiful set in fine condition, with only sparse scattered foxing, handsomely bound.

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