Weeping Beech at Margaret Carman Green
Borough: Queens
Community Board: 07
Designated: 2024
Tree Details
Species: European beech
(Fagus sylvatica)
Trunk Diameter 19
Inches
The Weeping Beech tree that once rooted itself in this park lived for 151 years, from 1847 to 1998 -- one of the City?s few trees to be landmarked. The tree originated at a nobleman?s estate in Beersal, Belgium from whence it was transported to New York City by the efforts of one enterprising gardener. Samuel Bowne Parsons (1819-1907), a prominent horticulturalist and father of Parks Superintendant Samuel Parsons Jr. (1844-1923), obtained the seedling and planted it on the grounds of his renowned nursery. In its maturity, its branches touched the ground and re-rooted, creating a ring of offspring surrounding its immense canopy. In the years before it finally succumbed to old age, it reached sixty feet in height with a ?leaf curtain? of eighty feet in diameter. Legend has it that this tree gave rise to generations of Weeping Beeches (Fagus sylvatica) in America.
Location
Margaret I. Carman Green - Weeping Beech
On 37th Ave, in Kingsland Homestead/Queens Historical Society courtyard
See this tree on the NYC Tree Map or visit our Great Trees page for more Great Trees
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