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Editorial Committee Members:
David E. Boufford
Anthony R. Brach
The Harvard University Herbaria have had a long history of interest in the Asian flora dating
back to the time of Asa Gray and Charles Sprague Sargent. Gray was the recipient of many
specimens from early United States exploring expeditions and his early papers on the
relationships of Asian and American plants form the basis for present day studies of plant
geography, particularly of the study of eastern Asian - eastern North American plant
relationships. Sargent was strongly influenced by Gray and very early after the founding of the
Arnold Arboretum, he set about to introduce Asian plants to the Boston environment and to bring
back specimens to the Arboretum's herbarium. Several collectors from the Arboretum explored for
plants in China, but perhaps the most well known was Ernest H. Wilson, who brought back seeds,
specimens and photographs from his several trips. Other botanical collectors not actually
employed by the Arboretum were supported, however, in their collecting endeavours in China.
These latter included Joseph Rock, Camillo Schneider, and later many Chinese botanists, including
Yü Te-tsun, Ching Ren-chang, S. K. Lau, Fang Wen-Pei, Wang Chan, Wang Chi-wu, and many others. One of
the greatest periods of acquisition of Asian specimens and Asian literature at Harvard was during
Elmer D. Merrill's directorship of the
Arnold Arboretum.
Merrill had a strong interest in Asia,
which he acquired during his days in the Philippines in the early 1900s, and he made every effort
to purchase specimens and literature relating to eastern and southeastern Asia during his ten
year tenure as director of the Arboretum. The rich collections from throughout Asia, not only
from China but also from all the countries surrounding China, place the Harvard Herbaria and
Harvard's botanical libraries among the most important institutions for the study of Chinese
plants and their relationships.