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Chronicling a Tree: Thoreau's Concord Elm

Chronicling a Tree: Thoreau's Concord Elm

FromThis Old Tree


Chronicling a Tree: Thoreau's Concord Elm

FromThis Old Tree

ratings:
Length:
59 minutes
Released:
Oct 14, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Concord, Massachusetts, 1856. Four men cut down a huge, seemingly healthy American elm tree using block and tackle, and ropes drawn by a horse. The graceful tree towered above a house whose owners heard creaking during a storm - they felt unsafe and had it removed. The event would have been long forgotten, except one of America’s greatest writers and earliest environmentalists also lived in Concord - Henry David Thoreau. Supremely ticked-off, the removal of the stately elm inspired a flurry of journal writing by Thoreau that defined elms as symbols of virtue that looked to Concord’s past and the country’s future. Guest Thomas Campanella, Professor at Cornell University and author of Republic of Shade: New England and the American Elm, shares his work. It turns out, elm trees  helped define our young nation’s sense of itself.GuestThomas J. CampanellaProfessor of City and Regional PlanningCornell UniversityRepublic of Shade: New England and the American Elm, Yale University Press, 2003.Henry David Thoreau and the Yankee Elm,  Arnoldia, 2001.Other Sources:Thoreau and the Language of Trees,  Richard Higgins, Univ of California Press, 2017.Podcast ConsultantMartha Douglas-OsmundsonMusicDiccon Lee, www.deeleetree.comArtworkDahn Hiuni, www.dahnhiuni.com/homeFollow onFacebook @thisoldtreepodInstagram @thisoldtreepodWebsitethisoldtree.showWe want to hear about the favorite tree in your life! To submit a 1-3 minute “Tree Story Short” for consideration to be aired on This Old Tree, record the story on your phone’s voice memo app and email to:doug@thisoldtree.netPhotoAmerican elm, First Baptist Church, Providence, RI (photo by Doug Still)This episode was written in part at the What Cheer Writers Club, Providence, RIhttps://whatcheerclub.spaces.nexudus.com/about
Released:
Oct 14, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (26)

Old trees are awe inspiring links to the past that fire our historical imagination. Ever wonder what their stories are? Seasoned arborist and amateur historian Doug Still interviews local experts, historians, and regular folks to celebrate the myths and uncover the real tales. If you're a tree lover, join in to look "beyond the plaque" at heritage trees and the human stories behind them. Biweekly.