Nellie R. Stevens
Evergreen · Female · Red berries · Zones 6-9
Cold-hardy pyramidal hybrid with glossy leaves and red fruit.
An evergreen member of the hybrid hollies group, Centennial Girl earns its place through bright red berries and a tough, long-lived constitution. Below is a full profile of Centennial Girl — its characteristics, how to grow it, whether it needs a pollinator for berries, and answers to the questions gardeners ask most.
Grouped among the hybrid hollies, Centennial Girl shows the hallmarks of the class — glossy, dark green, moderately spined leaves. Led by the fast, self-fruitful Nellie R. Stevens, the hybrid hollies are modern crosses bred for dense pyramidal form and outstanding privacy screening.
Centennial Girl is evergreen and hardy across USDA zones 5-8, so it suits a wide range of gardens with the right acidic, well-drained soil and seasonal care.
Centennial Girl makes a fast-growing, dense, broadly pyramidal evergreen, typically around 10-15 ft tall and 8 to 15 feet wide. Its foliage is glossy, dark green, moderately spined leaves. Knowing a holly's mature size and habit is the key to placing it well: give Centennial Girl room to reach its full spread without crowding, which also keeps air moving through the plant and disease at bay.
Centennial Girl is a female holly, so it carries the red berries — but only when a compatible male holly flowers within about fifty feet. Bees move the pollen; without a male in range, a female holly still flowers but sets little or no fruit.
Plant Centennial Girl where it will get full sun to part shade in acidic, moist, well-drained soil. Full sun gives the densest growth and the heaviest berry set. Set the plant at the depth it grew in the pot, water it deeply while it establishes, and mulch the root zone to hold moisture and keep the soil cool and acidic.
Centennial Girl suits fast privacy screens, tall evergreen hedges, specimen trees, and berry-for-winter plantings. Line several as a quick screen, or stand one as a specimen where its dense pyramid and red winter berries carry the view.
Most hybrid hollies grow quickly and easily in full sun to part shade and well-drained, slightly acidic soil, needing only late-winter shaping. Watch for the usual holly troubles — leaf miner, scale, and spider mites, and root rot in soggy ground — and head them off with the right site, good drainage, and good air flow. Yellowing leaves usually signal alkaline soil or poor drainage rather than disease.
Centennial Girl grows into a fast-growing, dense, broadly pyramidal evergreen, typically reaching 10-15 ft tall and 8 to 15 feet wide. Its final size depends on your climate, the site, and how you prune it.
Centennial Girl is female and bears red berries, but it needs a compatible male holly flowering within about fifty feet to pollinate it. One male can pollinate several nearby females.
Centennial Girl is evergreen, holding its glossy, dark green, moderately spined leaves through the winter.
Centennial Girl is hardy in USDA zones 5-8. That range describes the winter cold it can survive; gardeners colder than zone 5 should give it a sheltered site or choose a hardier holly.
Most hybrid hollies grow quickly and easily in full sun to part shade and well-drained, slightly acidic soil, needing only late-winter shaping. Give Centennial Girl an acidic, well-drained soil and the ordinary seasonal care any holly appreciates, and it is a straightforward, low-maintenance shrub.
Prune Centennial Girl in late winter, while it is dormant and before spring growth begins — that shapes the plant without removing the flower buds that become the next season's berries.