The Hamilton Spectator

Community bids farewell to 600-year-old oak tree

- BRUCE SHIPKOWSKI

For hundreds of years, an imposing white oak tree has watched over a New Jersey community and a church, providing protection from the blazing summer sun, serving as a scenic backdrop for thousands of photos and — according to legend — was a picnic site for George Washington.

But the tree — believed to be among the oldest in the United States — is not long for its place in the church graveyard that it’s called home for 600 years. Crews are due Monday at the Basking Ridge Presbyteri­an Church in Bernards to begin removing the tree.

The two to three days of chopping and pulling will draw attention from residents of a bedroom community about 50 kilometres west of New York that has long celebrated its white oak. It’s been the place to go for formal photos, a landmark for driving directions and a remarkable piece of natural history.

“I know it seems funny to some to mourn a tree, but I’m really going to miss seeing it,” said Bernards resident Monica Evans, recalling family photos during weddings and communions.

Arborists say the tree had stood for nearly 300 years before the church was built in 1717. It stands about 30 metres, has a trunk circumfere­nce of 5.4 metres and has a branch spread of roughly 46 metres.

The tree was declared dead after it began showing rot and weakness in the last couple of years, likely due to its age.

Among its notable visitors was Gen. George Washington, who town officials say picnicked at the tree with the Marquis de Lafayette. Experts say fewer trees are replicatin­g the old oak’s 600-year lifespan. They note that droughts, wildfires, invasive insects and other factors can greatly harm trees.

 ?? BOB SCIARRINO, ADVANCE MEDIA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo shows the dying 600-year-old white oak tree on the grounds at the Basking Ridge Presbyteri­an Church in Bernards, N.J.
BOB SCIARRINO, ADVANCE MEDIA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo shows the dying 600-year-old white oak tree on the grounds at the Basking Ridge Presbyteri­an Church in Bernards, N.J.

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