Enduring Roots: Encounters with Trees, History, and the American Landscape

Front Cover
Rutgers University Press, Jan 3, 2005 - History - 214 pages

Trees are the grandest and most beautiful plant creations on earth. From their shade-giving, arching branches and strikingly diverse bark to their complex root systems, trees represent shelter, stability, place, and community as few other living objects can.

Enduring Roots tells the stories of historic American trees, including the oak, the apple, the cherry, and the oldest of the world's trees, the bristlecone pine. These stories speak of our attachment to the land, of our universal and eternal need to leave a legacy, and demonstrate that the landscape is a gift, to be both received and, sometimes, tragically, to be destroyed.

Each chapter of this book focuses on a specific tree or group of trees and its relationship to both natural and human history, while exploring themes of community, memory, time, and place. Readers learn that colonial farmers planted marker trees near their homes to commemorate auspicious events like the birth of a child, a marriage, or the building of a house. They discover that Benjamin Franklin's Newtown Pippin apples were made into a pie aboard Captain Cook's Endeavour while the ship was sailing between Tahiti and New Zealand. They are told the little-known story of how the Japanese flowering cherry became the official tree of our nation's capital--a tale spanning many decades and involving an international cast of characters. Taken together, these and many other stories provide us with a new ways to interpret the American landscape.

"It is my hope," the author writes, "that this collection will be seen for what it is, a few trees selected from a great forest, and that readers will explore both--the trees and the forest--and find pieces of their own stories in each."

 

Contents

TAKING ROOT THE CHARTER OAK
3
FAMILY TREES
23
APPLES CORE ISSUES
39
THREE CHERRIES
65
RETURNING NATIVES
91
THE TREE THAT OWNED ITSELF
117
METHUSELAHS WALK
135
NOTES
161
BIBLIOGRAPHY
177
INDEX
191
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2005)

Gayle Brandow Samuels is the principal author of Women in the City of Brotherly Love... And Beyond.

Bibliographic information