2. Fothergilla major (Sims) Sweet, Hort. Suburb. Lond.  124.  1818.   
Fothergilla alnifolia var. major Sims,  Bot. Mag. 33: plate 1342.  1810; Fothergilla monticola Ashe
Shrubs , 7-65 dm; branches robust.  Leaves:  stipules 2.8-7(-10.2) mm; petioles 3-10(-18) mm.  Leaf blade  broadly elliptic or somewhat orbiculate to obovate, asymmetric, 2.5-13.5 × 4.2-12.5 cm, base rounded to truncate, rarely cuneate, often oblique, proximal margins entire, distal margins coarsely sinuate to repand, rarely entire, apex short-acuminate to rounded and mucronate; surfaces abaxially glaucous or green, adaxially green, both surfaces stellate-pubescent or nearly glabrous; veins (4-)5-6(-7) pairs.  Inflorescences  nearly sessile to short-pedunculate, 3-6 × 2-3 cm.  Flowers : calyx lobes persistent in fruit; stamens (10-)22-34; filaments 6-17 mm.  Fruiting spikes  3.5-7 × 1.5-2.5 cm.  Capsules  5.5-13 mm.  Seeds  5-6(-8) mm, apex pointed. 2 n  = 72.
Flowering spring (Apr-May). Bluffs, dry rocky woodlands, talus slopes, riverbanks, upper piedmont to mountains; 150-1300 m; Ala., Ark., Ga., N.C., S.C., Tenn.
The disjunct occurrence of Fothergilla major in Arkansas is a recent discovery.