Notice

Colin Mills, compiler of the Hortus Camdenensis, died in late November 2012 after a short illness. As he always considered the Hortus his legacy, it is his family's intention to keep the site running in perpetuity. It will not, however, be updated in the near future.

Fuchsia fulgens DC.

Frost-tender, upright shrub with spreading branches, ovate, finely-toothed leaves, to 23cm long, and pendant, terminal racemes of very small flowers, to 5cm long, with pink tubes, pale red sepals, green-tinged at the margins, and bright red corollas.  To 1.5m.  [RHSE, Hortus, Don].

Horticultural & Botanical History

‘This is probably the most beautiful plant of the Temperate Flora of Mexico.  It was originally met with by Mocino and Sesse, two Spanish naturalists, authors of an unpublished Flora Mexicana, and has very lately been introduced to this country.  The accompanying drawing was made from a plant in the possession of Mr. John Lee of Hammersmith, to whom the large silver medal of the Horticultural Society of London was awarded upon his exhibiting it at one of the meetings at the Society’s house in Regent Street.  It is difficult to conceive anything more brilliant than the appearance of this species, when its rich vermillion-coloured flowers are fixed beneath the influence of a Mexican sun; but if it is grown in a shaded site, with too much heat and moisture, the bright colours inevitably fade, and the plant is deprived of half its beauty. It will no doubt prove a robust shrub of easy culture, growing freely in a mixture of loam and peat in the green-house; cuttings of the young wood will strike freely in sand under a bell-glass on a moderate hot-bed.  It is probably about as hardy as F. arborescens, and perhaps like that species not enough so to stand the winter, or to flower well in the open border, but it will certainly grow and flower freely in the green-house; and it is by no means impossible that it may even succeed in the open air in good summers, in a warm sheltered situation.’  [BR f.1/1838].  ‘The great length and brilliant colour of its flowers, and the tuberous nature of its roots, constitute an entirely new feature of the genus Fuchsia and strongly recommend it to every cultivator.’  [MB p.163/1838,  MB p.221/1838].   

Curtis’s Botanical Magazine comments on hybrids produced by Curtis of Glazenwood Nursery: ‘[Curtis] has succeeded in producing a great number of hybrids, by means of other species, and flowers of all kinds are the result, from the balloon form of F. globosa, to the peculiarly elongated figure here described.’  The figure appears to be of Fuchsia fulgens.  [BM t.3801/1840].  Introduced to Britain in 1830.  FC p.266/1837.

History at Camden Park

Listed in all published catalogues [T.477/1843].  Brought out from Kew Gardens by Captain P. P. King in 1849 although already grown for a number of years by Macarthur.  [ML A1980-3].  This is one of very few fuchsias to thrive in the Camden Park gardens through the heat and humidity of summer.

Notes

Published Aug 16, 2009 - 02:47 PM | Last updated Mar 14, 2010 - 11:21 AM

Shown are leaves and flowers with pink tubes, green-tinged red sepals and bright red corollas.  Botanical Register f.1, 1838.

Fuchsia fulgens DC. | BR f.1/1838 | BHL

Family Onagraceae
Category
Region of origin

Mexico to Guatamala

Synonyms
Common Name

Upright fuchsia

Name in the Camden Park Record

Fuchsia fulgens 

Confidence level high