Plant of the Week
Poinsettia
Latin: Euphorbia pulcherrima

Walk into any business selling groceries, discount merchandise,
hardware, home supplies or plants, and you have to be careful not to trip
over all of the poinsettias.
This tropical flower in the spurge family is native to Mexico and has
become the symbol of Christmas the world over. Like many of our common
plants, it is largely an invention of the 20th Century even
though it was first introduced to the United States in 1829.
The poinsettia carries the common name of the person introducing it to
the U.S., the first ambassador to Mexico, Joel R. Poinsett (1779-1851) from
Charleston, S.C. Poinsett was an important figure in American history prior
to the Civil War, serving not only as ambassador, but also as senator for
South Carolina and Secretary of War during the Van Buren administration. As
Secretary of War, between 1837 to 1841, Poinsett saw troops under his
command involved in fighting Seminole Indians in Georgia and Florida and
moving the Cherokees remaining in the East to Oklahoma Territory, a process
which had begun a decade earlier. Poinsett County Arkansas, established in
1838, is named after Joel Poinsett.
As senator, Poinsett led a group of politicians and founded an
organization known as the "National Institute for the Promotion of Science."
The group promoted the use of a 100,000-pound sterling bequest from
Englishman James Smithson to develop a national museum for the relics, both
industrial and natural, of the new country. This group eventually led to the
establishment in 1846 of the Smithsonian Institution.
The adoption of the common name "poinsettia" is due to a botanical
tug-of-war that occurred between 19th Century botanists as they
struggled to classify and name the plants that were coming to them from
throughout the world. Robert Graham (1786-1845), a botanist in Edinburgh,
Scotland, classified the plant as a new species and called it Poinsettia
pulcherrima, with the new generic name honoring Poinsett and the species
name translating from Latin as "very handsome" in reference to the flowers.
This name was accepted by our leading botanical figure of the time,
Harvard’s Asa Gray who was a friend of Graham. Meanwhile, in Berlin J. F.
Klotzsch, the Curator of the Royal Herbarium, was studying the collection of
an earlier German botanist, Karl Willdenow (1765-1812), who had tentatively
classified the plant as a member of the genus Euphorbia.
Eventually the botanists all agreed that Klotzsch was right, but by this
time the name poinsettia had become entrenched as the common name for the
flower.
After the Civil War, the poinsettia began to appear sporadically in East
Coast greenhouses around the Christmas season. It was not until the turn of
the century, when the Ecke family in California began growing poinsettias as
a cut flower, that it really took off and became the floral symbol of
Christmas. Today, the poinsettia is the largest single floricultural crop,
with between 40 and 50 million pots sold each season.
The popularity of the modern poinsettia is due -- in part -- to its
almost complete indestructibility. It should have as much light in the home
as possible and be kept moist, but never standing in water. Allowing the
plant to dry out will cause the leaves to drop. Poinsettias should be kept
above 55 degrees.
Even given minimal care, it should be an easy chore to keep the plant
looking good until you tire of its presence on your coffee table in January.
While the poinsettia is not poisonous, all plants should be kept out of the
reach of toddlers that might want to go grazing on your holiday flowers.
By: Gerald Klingaman, retired
Extension Horticulturist
- Ornamentals
Extension News -
December 18, 1998
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