ALEXA WELCH EDLUND / MEDIA GENERAL NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO, 1995

Why the poinsettia?

By STAFF REPORTS

If you’re planning some holiday decorating this weekend, odds are you’ll pick up a poinsettia to add to your décor. But have you ever wondered why the poinsettia takes over flower shops and garden centers this time of year? Aren’t there other red, pink and white flowers?

Wonder no more.

Discovered in Mexico in 1828, the colorful red and green plant now synonymous with Christmas is named – at least commonly – after a U.S. ambassador to that country, Joel Roberts Poinsett, who also happened to be an amateur botanist.

But the poinsettia’s association with Christmas began several centuries earlier in the country where Poinsett found the plant growing like a weed on the side of the road.

Mexican legend tells the story of a young girl who was too poor to provide a gift for the celebration of Jesus’ birthday, so an angel encouraged her to gather weeds from the roadside and place them at the church alter. Soon after, beautiful crimson blossoms sprouted from the weeds.

Poinsett, who was born in Charleston, South Carolina in 1779 and served in Mexico from 1825-30, found the plant growing on the side of the road during a 1928 visit to Taxco del Alarcon, in southern Mexico. Poinsett sent a sample home for cultivation, and eventually began giving the plants to friends.

A few years later, the plant was given the scientific name of Euphorbia pulcherrima, with pulcherrima meaning “very beautiful,“ but the Aztecs had for years called it cuetlaxochitl, meaning “skin flower” or “star flower.“ The Aztecs used the plant create red dye and control fevers.

But it was in 1836, according to culturesheet.org, that horticulturist and historian William Prescott was asked to give the plant a common name.

After a bit of research, Prescott chose to name the plant after the Mexican ambassador.

Although in Mexico, the common name for the plant is La Flor de la Nochebueana, or flower of the Holy Night, and it is displayed each Dec. 12, which is the Dia de la Virgen.

Dec. 12 in the U.S. is, by act of Congress, National Poinsettia Day, which has its own Web site, http://www.poinsettiaday.com.
Dec. 12 also is anniversary of Poinsett’s death in 1851.

Now, 158 years later, and seemingly in keeping with the ambassador’s tradition, the U.S. Census Bureau reports that 75 million poinsettias are bought each year during the holiday season – gifts to family, friends and ourselves.
(We’re also pretty sure that a few black-thumbed decorators out there are picking up the artificial version at craft stores instead of garden centers.)

INFORMATION FROM THE BRISTOL HERALD COURIER IN BRISTOL, VIRGINIA

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Comments

A few typographical errors mar this otherwise excellent story. . .
1.) In paragraph 6, the final date in the sentence should be “1828” not “1928.“
2.) The word “Nochebuena” is misspelled in Paragraph 10.
3.) To those readers not familiar with Mexican cultural traditions, some elaboration about the importance of December 12 might be in order: The date is significant because it is the annual Roman Catholic feast day of “la Virgen de Guadalupe,“ the patron saint of Mexico and the rest of Latin America.

posted by Timtula | Thu, Dec 24 2009, 12:14 pm

Good blogpost, amazing looking website, added it to my favorites!!

posted by EdselEigenman | Fri, Jan 08 2010, 8:17 am
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