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There are, of course, red trilliums (Trillium erectum), as well, but they seem to occur less frequently than their white counterparts.
Over ten thousand woodland plants - including white and red trilliums, hepatica, bellwort, rosy twisted stalk, wild ginger, foam flower, and maiden's hair fern - have been introduced to this micro-habitat.
Carpets of white and red trilliums, Indian cucumber-root, mayflower, hepatica, adder's tongue, clintonia, wood lily, spring beauty, violets, and yellow lady's-slipper, one of the 20 or so species of orchids occurring within the park, can be seen.
The plant takes its name "wake-robin" by analogy with the robin, which has a red breast heralding spring.
The club was named after the Wake-Robin wildflower.
Wake-robin, wakerobin, or wake robin may refer to one of several flowers that bloom in the spring:
Low John is the root of the trillium or wake-robin, Trillium grandiflorum.
It is also known as sweet white wake-robin, sweet white trillium and confusing trillium.
Some of the Wake-Robin Golf Club's records are held at Howard University.
In quaint sage-green draperies, she seemed a flower, with her small vivid face irresistibly reminding Saxon of a springtime wake-robin.
Trillium catesbaei, also known as bashful wakerobin or rosy wake-robin, is a spring flowering perennial plant found in the southeastern United States.
In Ontario, the white trillium (Trillium grandiflorum), also known as the wake-robin and the white lily, was officially adopted in 1937.
Trillium sessile, the toadshade or sessile-flowered wake-robin, is a perennial spring wildflower native to the central part of the eastern United States and the Ozarks.
Four years later, the Boston house of Hurd & Houghton published Burroughs's first collection of nature essays, Wake-Robin.
Also, the Wake-Robin Golf Club, whose first president was Helen Webb Harris, joined the UGA under her leadership.
The first volume, Wake-Robin, was published in 1871 and subsequent volumes were published regularly until the final volume, The Last Harvest, was published in 1922.
Later writers of the 19th and early 20th century encouraged environmental conservation, including naturalist John Burroughs in such works as Wake-Robin (1871) and Accepting the Universe (1920).
The Wake-Robin Golf Club was part of the movement to force the Professional Golfers Association to drop its "White-only" rule for eligibility, which it did in 1961.
Helen Webb Harris founded the Wake-Robin Golf Club in 1937; it is the United States's oldest registered African-American women's golf club.
The Wake-Robin Golf Club and the Royal Golf Club continued to pressure Secretary Ickes, and he issued an order in 1941 opening public courses to all.
Trillium erectum, also known as red trillium, wake-robin, purple trillium, Beth root, or stinking Benjamin, is a species of flowering plant native to the east and north-east of North America.
Aside from documenting all of the 92 commonly seen species in the creek corridor, the club noted the presence of the following state protected plants: large-flowered trillium, stinking Benjamin or wake-robin, bloodroot, fancy (toothed) wood fern, fragile fern and bulblet fern.
Burroughs believed that the nature writer must remain faithful to nature as well as the personal responses to what they witness; he wrote in the introduction to his 1895 book Wake-Robin that the "literary naturalist does not take liberties with facts; facts are the flora upon which he lives."
Species include bunchberry, wood sorrel, purple trilliums, and club mosses.
Species of the genus Dioscorea contain diosgenin: a saponin similar to the structure of sarsasapogenin found in beth root.
When Marker found that there was a similar structure to sarsasapogenin in Beth Roots, a member of the lily family, he began his work to develop the Marker degradation.
He identified one candidate in Trillium erectum ("Beth root" or "Wake-robin"), a sapogenin called diosgenin which had previously been found in Japanese yams (Dioscorea tokoro).
Trillium erectum, also known as red trillium, wake-robin, purple trillium, Beth root, or stinking Benjamin, is a species of flowering plant native to the east and north-east of North America.
Beth Root, Red Clover, Chaste Berry and Wild Yam are credited with the lack of menopausal disorders among Pacific Islanders, American Indians and South-East Asians.