Houston Chronicle

White House’s Jackson tree needs a trim

- By Sarah Kaplan

A large part of a magnolia tree planted on the south grounds of the White House by President Andrew Jackson will be removed because it poses a safety risk.

WASHINGTON — The enormous magnolia tree stood watch by the South Portico of the White House for nearly two centuries.

Its dark green, glossy leaves shaded politician­s and heads of state.

Its ivory flowers bloomed through times of peace and war.

It is the oldest tree on the White House grounds, a witness to Easter egg rolls and state ceremonies, a resignatio­n, a plane crash, all the tumult and triumph of 39 presidenci­es.

But the iconic magnolia is now too old and badly damaged to remain in place, the White House announced Tuesday.

At the recommenda­tion of specialist­s from the National Arboretum, first lady Melania Trump called for a large portion of the tree to be removed this week.

The decision, first reported by CNN, comes after decades of attempts to hold the aged tree up with a steel pole and cables. Arboretum experts said that rigging is now compromise­d and that the wood of the magnolia’s trunk is too delicate for further interventi­ons. Any other tree in that condition would have been cut down years ago.

But this is not any other tree. According to White House lore, the stately evergreen was brought to Washington as a seedling by Andrew Jackson. The magnolia was a favorite tree of his wife, Rachel, who had died just days after he was elected. Jackson blamed the vicious campaign — during which his political opponents questioned the legitimacy of his marriage — for his wife’s untimely death.

The tree became a fixture in White House events. Herbert Hoover reportedly took breakfast and held Cabinet meetings at a table beneath its sprawling branches. Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke with Winston Churchill in its shade. Richard Nixon strode past it as he left the White House for the last time after his resignatio­n. In 1994, a Maryland man piloting a stolen plane clipped the tree before suffering a deadly crash against the White House wall. And for decades, the magnolia was featured on the back of the $20 bill.

According to White House spokeswoma­n Stephanie Grisham, the first lady requested that wood from the magnolia be preserved and seedlings be made available for a possible replanting in the same area.

 ?? Andrew Harnik / Associated Press ?? Because of the damage it has sustained over the years, a large portion of this famed magnolia tree will have to be removed to keep the remainer standing.
Andrew Harnik / Associated Press Because of the damage it has sustained over the years, a large portion of this famed magnolia tree will have to be removed to keep the remainer standing.

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