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Macro color photograph of Miss Willmott's Ghost A Bit About Miss Willmott Ellen
Willmott (1858-1934) was an independently wealthy British amateur
horticulturist who had several plants named after her, including a
white double flowering lilac and a pale, pink edged rose. The best
known plant that bears her name, however, is a biennial sea holly,
eryngium gigantium, known as 'Miss Willmott's Ghost.' Apparently Miss
Willmott enjoyed sprinkling the seeds of this particular plant about --
in effect, leaving her "ghosts" to appear in the gardens of her friends
and acquaintences long after she had departed those places. These
plants were also said to match her 'prickly' personality. She
began gardening at her home at Waverly Place at seventeen years of
age. In her later years, the never married Miss Willmott became a bit
eccentric and cantankerous. She bought properties in Italy and France
and continued creating gardens. At one time she had one hundred
gardeners on her payroll. She was arrested for shoplifting (the charges
were eventually dropped), carried a revolver in her purse and booby
trapped her daffodils to thwart bulb thieves. When
she died penniless in 1934, the garden which once held over 100,000
species of expertly culitvated plants from the world over, was sold to
pay her debts. I've grown this plant in my moongarden for
several years. Even though it's a biennial, it's a prolific reseeder.
The plant at maturity is approximately 2-3 (or more) feet tall with
multiple stems erupting from the main stem, each bearing a 2-3 inch
wide set of bracts surrounding umbels of florets similar to thistles. |