Acer campestre 'William Caldwell'

Acer campestre
Details
Cultivar 'William Caldwell'
Origin William Caldwell Nursery, Cheshire, UK

The Field Maple cultivar 'William Caldwell' was cloned from a seedling discovered at Knutsford, England, in 1976 by Donovan Caldwell Leaman, head nurseryman at the now-defunct William Caldwell Nursery. The tree was released to commerce in 1980.

Contents

Description

The tree is noted for its fastigiate shape, and foliage which turns orange / red in autumn where planted on acid soils, not yellow as with the species.[1]

Cultivation

'William Caldwell' is largely restricted to the UK, where it remains uncommon; it was imported by the U S National Arboretum, Washington, D. C. in 2010. The tree is reputedly difficult to propagate.

Synonymy

The cultivar was known as 'King Canute' until 1983; Canute was the emblem and trademark of the William Caldwell nursery.

References

  1. ^ van Gelderen, D. M., de Jong, P. C., and Oterdoom, H. J. (1994). Maples of the World. Timber Press, Oregon. ISBN 0-88192-000-2.

Accessions

Europe

Nurseries

Europe

Etymology

The cultivar is named for the William Caldwell nursery (ceased trading c. 1990).