Franklinia is thought to be closer in relation to the Asian genus
Schima than to
Gordonia. Recent DNA studies and examinations of floral
ontogeny in the Theaceae place
Franklinia together with
Gordonia and
Schima in a
subtribe.
Hybrid crosses have been produced between
Franklinia alatamaha and
Gordonia lasianthus, and between
Franklinia alatamaha and
Schima argentea.
History "No tree which ornaments our gardens has a more romantic history," begins a lengthy 1933 article published in
The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. The history of
Franklinia's discovery in coastal Georgia, followed by disappearance in the wild, and saved only by its ability to grow, flower, and seed in the Philadelphia garden of its initial collector entail the main thread of the unusual botanical history.
Philadelphia botanists
John and
William Bartram first observed the tree growing along the
Altamaha River near Fort Barrington in the British colony the
Province of Georgia in October 1765. John Bartram recorded "severall very curious shrubs" in his journal entry for October 1, 1765. William Bartram returned several times to the same location on the Altamaha during a collecting trip to the American South, funded by Dr. John Fothergill of London. William Bartram collected Franklinia
seeds during this extended trip to the South from 1773 through 1776, a journey described in his book ''
Bartram's Travels'' published in Philadelphia in 1791. William Bartram brought seed back to Philadelphia in 1777 at which time William reported to his father that he had relocated the plant, but this time had been able to retrieve its seeds although it was not until after John's death (1777) that he was able to achieve flowering plants (1781). After several years of study, William Bartram assigned the "rare and elegant flowering shrub" to a new genus
Franklinia, named in honor of his father's great friend
Benjamin Franklin. The new plant name,
Franklinia alatamaha, was first published by a Bartram cousin,
Humphry Marshall, in 1785 in his catalogue of North American trees and shrubs entitled
Arbustrum Americanum. William Bartram was the first to report the extremely limited distribution of
Franklinia. "We never saw it grow in any other place, nor have I ever since seen it growing wild, in all my travels, from Pennsylvania to
Point Coupe, on the banks of the Mississippi, which must be allowed a very singular and unaccountable circumstance; at this place there are two or of ground where it grows plentifully." After returning to Georgia after the American Revolution, Bartram was unable to find the trees. The tree was last verified in the wild in 1803 by the English plant collector John Lyon (although there are hints it may have been present into at least the 1840s). The cause of its extinction in the wild is not known, but has been attributed to a number of causes including fire, flood, overcollection by plant collectors, and
fungal disease introduced with the cultivation of
cotton plants. All the Franklin trees known to exist today are descended from seed collected by William Bartram and propagated at
Bartram's Garden in Philadelphia. The John Bartram Association undertook a search for trees from 1998 to 2000 and located more than 2,000 specimens growing worldwide. The greatest number were reported to them from Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and New Jersey. At that time there were trees in 36 states and eight countries. DNA evidence supports that more than one tree was sampled by Bartram during his original collection in Georgia and the diversity was maintained over the years. To mark the 300th anniversary of John Bartram's birth in 1998, Bartram's Garden launched a project to locate as many
Franklinia trees as possible.
Synonyms The genus has one synonym,
Lacathea, published by
Richard Anthony Salisbury in 1806. The species
Franklinia alatamaha has
botanical synonyms.
Names Marshal coined the
specific name,
alatamaha, as a
Botanical Latin form of the
Altamaha River where it was collected by Bartram. The genus name,
Franklinia, is also used in the nursery trade as a common name for the species, though it is also known as the
Franklin tree. ==Status as a glacial relict==