From Frederick Bailey1    23 December 1879

Robert St Brisbane

Dec 23rd 1879

Dear Baron Mueller

The Rev J E Tenison Woods has returned to Brisbane from his tour in our northern parts and brought a rich collection of one thing and another among the botanical specimens which he kindly handed over to me are two Eucalypts which may be interesting to you so I forward them at once.

No 1 He describes as a tree about 30 ft. high with a very scaly light-brown or yellow bark, which character persists even in the smaller branches

No 2 Is a very low tree growing on stony ranges with an ironbark very hard and much split about 20 ft high leaves opposite cordate auriculate sessile to the terminal branches No difference in the older trees All covered with a blue bloom Called bastard Ironbark

Habitat Ravenswood & Charters Towers ranges No 1 most rare.

 
 

Don’t forget to put Angophora Woodsiana in the next Fragmenta. And also a peculiar Daviesia I sent you good specimen of so far back as Oct 1878 I2 might be a form of D corymbosa Sm. But I rather think it new3

Yours Obediently

F. M. Bailey

I notice in Eucalyptographia you say that E botryoides Sm does not come into Q-land. I feel confident that the specimens I sent you down are that species and is our largest Eucalypt but I have not [here] now to refer to; I hope I did not send it. It is to4 tallest and largest Euc of our scrubs.

 

Bastard Bloodwood

Specimen of flowers &c sent with others Oct 7th 18775

Fruit specimens of this I also sent on the 6th of March 18786

And now I send the young shoots off a stump of tree showing its rusty pubescence

So far as I can make out this is a poor timber, it is of a light color and somewhat soft It also has the rings of dark gum in its timber like the true Bloodwood E. corymbosa. The persistent bark is also more friable than the true Bloodwood. The tree is not of large size say diameter of trunk from 1 ft to 1½ ft height say 60 to 80 ft As a shade tree it might be useful having a rather dense foliage. I fail to find it in the Flora Australiensis7 Can you make it out?

F. M. Bailey

 

Angophora Woodsiana

Daviesia corymbosa

Eucalyptus botryoides

Eucalyptus corymbosa

 
MS annotation by M: 'Answ | 28/12/79 | FvM'. Letter not found.
It?
M did not discuss Angophora woodsiana or Daviesia in subsequent numbers of the Fragmenta .
the?
Letter not found.
Letter not found.
Bentham (1863-78).

Please cite as “FVM-79-12-23a,” in Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, edited by R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells accessed on 29 March 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/vonmueller/letters/79-12-23a