Dogwood
            - Cornus florida L. 
            
 - Cornaceae 
            
 - Cornus family 
          
  
        
         
        
         
           
          Common Names
            American 
            dogwood 
             Boxwood 
             Budwood 
             Cornelian 
            Tree 
             Dogtree 
             False 
            Box 
             Florida 
            cornel 
             Florida 
            dogwood 
             Flowering 
            cornel 
             Flowering 
            dogwood 
             Green 
            Ozier 
             Virginia 
            dogwood 
               
           
          Parts Usually Used
          Inner bark, berries, twigs  
             
           
          Description of Plant(s) and Culture
          Dogwood is a native American, our most showy deciduous tree, growing 
            to 30 feet high; the bark is brown and rough, the leaves opposite, 
            ovate, pointed, and darker green above than beneath. Latex threads 
            appear at veins when leaves are split apart. The flowers are small 
            and greenish-yellow but are obscured by the large, white or pink bracts 
            so that the whole looks like a large white or pink flower. Flowers 
            are in clusters, April-May. The fruit is a glossy, dry, scarlet berry 
            two celled and two seeds, is inedible and very bitter; October-November. 
          Other varieties: Chinese dogwood (Cornus machrophylla), Chinese 
            name Sung-yang; in Japan this tree is Celtis muku or Ehretia serrata; 
            Jamaican dogwood (Piscidia erythrina) used medicinally for panic attacks 
            and excessive stress; and Osier dogwood (Cornus stolonifera) used 
            by the Native Americans, the inner bark has properties of quinine 
            used as tea internally.  
             
           
          Where Found
          Found from Maine to Florida and west to Minnesota, Kansas, and Texas. 
          Grows in the understorey of woods, along roadsides and in old fields 
             
             
           
          Medicinal Properties
          Astringent, febrifuge, stimulant, tonic  
             
           
          Biochemical Information
          Tannic and gallic acids, resin, gum, oil, wax, lignin, lime potash 
            and iron  
             
           
          Legends, Myths and Stories
          Widely used in the South, especially during the Civil War for malarial 
            fevers and chronic diarrhea. 
          An 1830 herbal reported that the Native Americans and captive Africans 
            in Virginia were remarkable for the whiteness of their teeth, and 
            attributed it to the use of Dogwood chewing sticks. Once chewed for 
            a few minutes, the tough fibers at the ends of the twigs split into 
            a fine soft "brush". Also, the Native American tribe, the Arikaras, 
            mixed bearberry with the dried inner bark of the red dogwood to make 
            sacred tobacco which they smoked in a regulation red pipestone pipe. 
             
             
           
          Uses
          Dogwood bark is best used as an ointment for ague, malaria 
            (substitute for quinine), fever, 
            pneumonia, colds, 
            and similar complaints. Used for diarrhea. 
            Externally, poulticed onto external ulcers 
            and sores. Twigs used as chewing 
            sticks, forerunners of the toothpick. It was sometimes used as a substitute 
            when Peruvian bark could not be obtained.  
             
           
          Formulas or Dosages
          Use only dried dogwood bark. Fresh bark upsets the stomach and bowels. 
          Infusion: steep 1 tbsp. bark in 1 pint water for 30 minutes 
            and strain. Take 1/2 cup every 2-3 hours.  
          Tincture: take 20-40 drops in water, as needed. 
             
           
         Warning
          As with hard toothbrushes, dogwood chewing sticks can cause receding 
            gums.  
             
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