Chauncey Beadle Explained

Chauncey Delos Beadle
Birth Date:August 5, 1866
Birth Place:St. Catharines, Canada West
Death Date:1950
Death Place:Asheville, North Carolina
Nationality:Canadian
Field:Botany
Horticulture
Work Institution:Biltmore Estate
Alma Mater:Cornell University
Author Abbreviation Bot:Beadle

Chauncey Delos Beadle (August5, 18661950) was a Canadian-born botanist and horticulturist active in the southern United States. He was educated in horticulture at Ontario Agricultural College (1884) and Cornell University (1889). In 1890 the landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted hired him to oversee the nursery at Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina on a temporary basis. Olmsted had been impressed by Beadle's "encyclopedic" knowledge of plants. Beadle ended up working at Biltmore for more than 60 years, until his death in 1950. He is best known for his horticultural work with azaleas, and described several species and varieties of plants from the southern Appalachian region. He and three friends, including his "driver and companion" Sylvester Owens, styled themselves the Azalea Hunters. The group traveled over the eastern United States for a period of fifteen years, studying and collecting native plants. In 1940 Beadle donated his entire collection of 3,000 plants to Biltmore Estates.

He also designed the landscape at Gunston Hall, Biltmore Forest, North Carolina and Intheoaks at Black Mountain, North Carolina.[1] [2] [3]

Beadle wrote scientific papers describing new species and varieties of North American plants, for example, papers in the journal Biltmore Botanical Studies and his major work on the genus Crataegus (hawthorns) in John Kunkel Small's 1903 book Flora of the Southeastern United States. (See, for example, to the scientific description of Florida Mock-orange, Philadelphus floridus.) Two of his important collaborators at Biltmore were Charles Lawrence Boynton and Frank Ellis Boynton. In popular literature, Beadle wrote the Introduction for Alice Lounsberry's Southern Wildflowers and Trees.

References

  1. Web site: Davyd Foard Hood . Gunston Hall. National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory . May 1991. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2014-08-01.
  2. Web site: Jack Reak and Martha Fullington . Intheoaks. National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory . December 1990. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2014-08-01.
  3. Web site: Samuel A. Bingham III. Thomas Wadley Raoul House. National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory . February 2006. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2016-07-07.

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