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Medicinal Herb Info

Medicinal Herb Info

Devil’s Walking Stick

Contents:

Common Names | Parts Usually Used | Plant(s) & Culture | Where Found
Uses | How Sold | Warning | Resource Links | Bibliography

    Scientific Names

    Devil's Walking Stick

    • Aralia spinosa L.
    • Ginseng Family

    Common Names

    • Angelica tree

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    Parts Usually Used

    Root and berries
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    Description of Plant(s) and Culture

    Devil's Walking Stick

    The largest North American member of the ginseng family. It may grow to 30 feet tall, with a trunk 6 inches in diameter. Sharp curved spines surround joints on the trunk, especially of younger specimens. The large compound leaves (to 6 feet long) are twice divided and topped in summer by an enormous panicle of tiny white blossoms in umbels. The purple-red berries form by September or October.

    Woody; 30 ft. tall with trunk 6 inches in diameter. Main stem and leaf stalks with any sharp, often stout, spines. Leaves large (to 6 ft. long), twice-divided; leaflets numerous, oval, toothed. Tiny white flowers in umbels, in a very large panicle (flowers July-September); purple-red berries form by September or October.
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    Where Found

    Rich woods, alluvial soils. Southern New England (cultivated) to Florida; Texas north to Michigan.
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    Uses

    Devil's Walking Stick

    In folk tradition, fresh bark strongly emetic, purgative, thought to cause salivation. Tincture of berries used for toothaches, and rheumatic pain. Root poulticed for boils, skin eruptions, and swelling.

    In folk tradition, fresh bark used as strong emetic, purgative, thought to cause salivatioon. Tincture of berries used for toothaches, rheumatic pain. Root poulticed for boils, skin eruptions, swelling.
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    How Sold

    Tincture
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    Warning

    Handling roots may cause dermatitis. Large amounts of berries poisonous.
    Use with professional medical supervision.
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    Resource Links

    Civil War Era Medicinals Found Potentially Effective

    Futurity: 3 Plants from U.S. Civil War Medical Guide Fight Infection

    Emory University: Civil War plant medicines blast drug-resistant bacteria

    Nature.com: American Civil War plant medicines inhibit growth, biofilm formation, and quorum sensing by multidrug-resistant bacteria

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    Bibliography

    Buy It! Resources of the Southern Fields and Forests, Medical, Economical, and Agricultural; Being Also a Medical Botany of the Confederate States, by Francis Peyre Porcher

    Buy It! Wild Plants and Survival Lore: Secrets of the Forest, by Mark Warren

    Buy It! Eastern/Central Medicinal Plants, by Steven Foster and James A. Duke., Houghton Mifflin Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10000

    Buy It! Webster’s New World Dictionary, Third College Edition, Victoria Neufeldt, Editor in Chief, New World Dictionaries: A Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., 15 Columbus Circle, New York, NY 10023

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