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Specimens had
subsequently been compared in the Kew in Britain and other herbaria, but
without the discovery of any similar plant elsewhere. Until 1908, the then
Superintendent of the Botanical and Afforestion Department, Mr. S. T. Dunn
described the tree in Latin and formally published it as a new species in the
Journal of Botany. Mr. Dunn added in the article that, ˇ§It is indeed to the
Fathers of the above Mission (Missions Etrangeres at Pokfulam) that we owe the
preservation of the Bauhinia. It was discovered by them near the ruins of a
house on the sea-shore; from the trees thus produced the Botanic Gardens were
supplied.ˇ¨ The species Bauhinia blakeana was named after Sir Henry and
Lady Blake to commemorate the kind interest taken in the Botanic Gardens by
them. Sir Henry Blake was the Governor of Hong Kong from 1898 to 1903.
Bauhinia
blakeana was propagated by cutting, grafting or air-layering. All the
individuals we see today are probably the direct descendants of the one first
cultivated in Botanic Gardens.
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