The
*Real* Irish Shamrock
The
true Irish Shamrock, as identified by Nathaniel Colgan c. 1893 is
a clover. It is not one of any or many clovers, it is one species,
collected from a majority of counties at that time and with the exception
of a very few plants, the majority were Trifolium repens or
a form of this plant - White clover also known as Dutch Clover.
A few
years ago, when I was in the United States, I made enquiries of the
old lady whose house I was staying in as to the name of a plant she
had, and I was told in no uncertain terms that it was a Shamrock -
and she wondered how I could claim to be Irish if I didn't know what
it was!! :-) The plant I saw was in no way anything like what we call
Shamrock and even here, I notice differences in what is being sold
as Shamrock from one place to another - so, the day I found this particular
paper in the Irish Naturalist, I was delighted. I have found photographs
and taxonomic descriptions of three of these four plants. The fourth
plant mentioned Trifolium minus, "a species listed here
that should 'share the honour equally' with Trifolium repens"
- has been re-classified, and is now considered to be a form of Trifolium
repensMany
say that there is no true shamrock, it is simply a species of clover
and can be any one of a number of different species- there are web
sites that do say that Trifolium repens is the Irish Shamrock,
but rarely is the person who came to this conclusion mentioned. Those
sites that do name Nathaniel Colgan as the botanist, tend to
give the impression that there are still other plants that fall into
a general category of 'Shamrock'Nathaniel
Colgan collected plants from many Irish counties (not all), he did
receive specimens from the Gaeltacht areas - those places that he
considered that the people would produce the plant that was most likely
the original 'shamrock' and because "the Irish-speaking districts
of our island, where old national usages may be assumed to have the
greatest tenacity of existence..........." and so, the conclusions
drawn by Nathaniel Colgan on the basis of his work, given the time
period this was carried out in should really be taken as evidence
that there is one true shamrock. Trifolium repens and that
Trifolium minus, considered at one time to be a separate species
is really a form of Trifolium repens, that is to say the same plant,
with some very minor differences, that do not accord it the distinction
of a different species.
A 'taxonomic'
description for those who may not be familiar with the word is a description
of the parts or bits of a plant or animal that help us to distinguish
between it and another similar plant or animal. These differences
may be minute and hard to recognise unless you are familiar with the
structure of any plant or animal.
The
Shamrock : A Further attempt to fix its species
by
Nathaniel Colgan
published
in the Irish Naturalist 1893
photographs
and descriptions are an addition
On the
approach of last Saint Patrick's Day I was induced, chiefly by the kind
offer of assistance made me by the editors of this Journal, to take
in hands once more the inquiry into the species of our national badge,
begun some years earlier, with the results detailed in the issue for
last August. A notice to subscribers was accordingly inserted in the
March number of this year, so framed as to ensure that all specimens
sent in response should be certified as genuine by competent authorities,
while, at the same time, as a provision against a not improbable lack
of interest in the subject amongst the subscribers to the Irish Naturalist,
some three dozens of circulars were prepared and sent by post to selected
points in the Irish-speaking districts, chiefly along our western sea-board.
These circulars, in almost all instances, were addressed to Roman Catholic
parish clergymen; and, as I had fully expected, the percentage of replies
they brought me was very much larger than in the case of the printed
notice. Of the circulars, twenty per cent were answered, a proportion
not far short of expectation. As for the printed notice distributed
through the agency of the Irish Naturalist, I cannot presume to say
exactly how small the percentage of answers may have been. Out of the
whole body of subscribers, however, only eight forwarded specimens of
Shamrocks; but, of these, one sent no less than five, another, four,
and a third, three specimens, each certified as genuine by a distinct
authority.
List of
names of those who sent plants
In addition
to the plants thus secured, Mr. F. W. Burbidge, Director of Trinity
College Botanic Garden, supplied me with a root, certified by one
of his gardeners, a Tipperary man, as the real Shamrock, and part of
the stock grown in the Gardens, and supplied as such to English inquirers;
another specimen was bought from an advertiser in the Co. Louth, who
offered the plant for sale, at a not unprofitable price, "as the
true Irish variety," and, finally, three specimens were bought
in Dublin on the 17th March as real Shamrock, from three different itinerant
vendors, each of whom was required to exercise the most scrupulous care
in the selection of the genuine plant from the obviously miscellaneous
collection in her basket. (These three plants matured into three distinct
species, Medicago lupulina, Trifolium repens
and Trifolium minus)
Altogether,
thirty-five Shamrocks -were secured and carefully planted and labelled,
after they had been provisionally classified according to species. A
study of the minuter distinctions of Trifolium repens,
Trifolium minus and Medicago lupulina, made
it possible to carry out the classification with confidence even in
the undeveloped stage in which most of the specimens reached me: In
no single instance, indeed, in which the plant survived up to the flowering
and fruiting season, (and only two out of the total of thirty-five succumbed
to the extraordinary dryness of the remarkable spring and early summer
of this year), was this provisional classification found in error; so
that my Patrick's Day determination of these two as T. repens
and T. minus, respectively, may be accepted as accurate. Of the
surviving thirty-three plants, all had flowered and many had fruited
by the 23rd June, T. minus in all cases keeping well ahead of
T. repens. By the end of June the entire crop of Shamrocks, or,
at least, specimens of the thirty-three plants of which it was made
up, was harvested and garnered, that is to say, dried, mounted, and
labelled, for the satisfaction of obstinate adherents of Trifolium
repens.
The results
of this harvest may be most clearly shown thus :-
19 Shamrocks matured into Trifolium repens.
12 Shamrocks matured into Trifolium minus.
2 Shamrocks matured into Trifolium pratense.
2 Shamrocks matured into Medicago lepulina.
It will
be seen that the results of this year's inquiry shows, contrary to my
expectation, a decided preponderance in favour of T. repens.
But if we add in the results of the former inquiry , the balance between
the two species is almost redressed.