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James Blair Hall

Tyler Garden
Tyler Garden Three bronze busts in this garden honor the legacy of the Tyler family.
Bignonia capreolata
Bignonia capreolata Three bronze busts in this garden honor the legacy of the Tyler family. Steven J. Baskauf http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu
Ginkgo biloba
Ginkgo biloba The ginkgo has two interesting features, its fan shaped leaves and golden fall color. Tangopaso
Styrax. sp.
Styrax. sp. Gently nodding flowers of the snowbell. R. A. Howard, Courtesy of Smithsonian Institution

The south entrance to James Blair Hall is flanked by two lusterleaf holly (Ilex latifolia) trees. This nonnative species has unusually coarse-textured and long (up to 6 inches) leaves and bears dense clusters of large red berries.

Directly west of the building is the Tyler Family Garden, dedicated in 2004 in recognition of the Tyler family's extraordinary legacy to the College over three centuries. Three bronze busts feature Lyon Gardiner Tyler, the 17th president of William and Mary; his father, the 10th U.S. President, John Tyler, who served as rector and chancellor of the College; and Lyon Gardiner Tyler’s grandfather, John Tyler, who served as the 18th governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

As you enter the garden, you will notice a dense vine hugging the old brick border. This is the creeping fig (Ficus pumila) sporting its juvenile leaves.  Routine pruning keeps the small-leaved habit. If it has recently been pruned, look at the ground level and you will see it beginning to climb again.  Inside the garden are a number of interesting specimens including the maidenhair tree (Ginkgo biloba ‘Princeton Sentry’), the only tree species with a fan-shaped leaf. Fossil evidence indicates that the ginkgo family dates back 270 million years with this species being the only survivor of the family.  It is now known only from cultivation.  The last natural populations were presumed to be from China. Other features of this garden include Carolina allspice (Calycanthus floridus ‘Athens’), snowbell (Styrax sp.), Japanese cleyera (Ternstroemia gymnanthera), and an elusive native volunteer with gorgeous humming-bird pollinated flowers in spring - cross vine (Bignonia capreolata) - finding a home on the brick border on the north side.