Japanese Cherry Trees
Japanese Cherry Trees
JAPANESE CHERRY TREES, in Potomac Park, Washington, D.C., attract thousands of visitors during blossom time each April. They were presented by the city of Tokyo as a token of goodwill from the people of Japan to the people of the United States. The first shipment in 1909 had to be destroyed because of insect pests. The city of Tokyo then, in a special nursery, grafted flowering cherry trees onto wild cherry stock, and the trees reached Washington in perfect condition. The first two were planted by then first lady Helen Taft and the wife of Japanese ambassador Count Sutemi Chinda on 27 March 1912.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Jefferson, Roland M. "Cherry Blossoms—Restoring a National Treasure." Agricultural Research 47, no. 4 (April 1999): 4–8.
Fred A.Emery/h. s.
See alsoJapan, Relations with .