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Gardening With Flowers
Flowers And Plants - Natures Garden:
Common Hawthorn ; White Thorn; Scarlet-fruited Thorn; Red Haw; Mayflowers

White Sweet Clover; Bokhara or Tree Clover; White Melilot; Honey Lotus

Flowering Spurge

Staghorn Sumac; Vinegar Tree

American Holly

Black Alder; Winterberry; Fever-bush

Bittersweet; Wax-work; Staff-tree

New Jersey Tea; Wild Snowball; Red-root

Northern, Wild, Fox, or Plum Grape

White Violets

Read More Articles On Flowers

Flowers - New Jersey Tea

( Originally Published 1916 )


New Jersey Tea; Wild Snowball; Red-root

(Ceanothus Americanus) Buckthorn family

Flowers—Small, white, on white pedicels, crowded in dense, oblong, terminal clusters. Calyx white, hemispheric, 5-lobed; 5 petals, hooded and long-clawed; 5 stamens with long filaments; style short, 3-cleft. Stems: Shrubby, 1 to 3 ft. high, usually several, from a deep reddish root. Leaves : Alternate, ovate-oblong, acute at tip, finely saw-edged, 3-nerved, on short petioles.

Preferred Habitat—Dry, open woods and thickets. FloweringSeason—May—July.

Distribution—Ontario south and west to the Gulf of Mexico.

Light, feathery clusters of white little flowers crowded on the twigs of this low shrub interested thrifty colonial housewives of Revolutionary days not at all ; the tender, young, rusty, downy leaves were what they sought to dry as a substitute for imported tea. Doubtless the thought that they were thereby evading George the Third's tax and brewing patriotism in every kettleful added a sweetness to the home-made beverage that sugar itself could not impart. The American troops were glad enough to use New Jersey tea throughout the war. A nankeen or cinnamon-colored dye is made from the reddish root.



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