Before Earth Day, Arbor Day was the primary environmental celebration and semi-holiday in the United States. And for a while it was a very big deal with tens of thousands of volunteers across the country planting and tending trees. The results were breath taking.
Arbor Day is often credited with re-foresting American cities and towns. Old 19th Century photographs reveal that many were barren urban wastelands long denuded foliage with buildings jammed together and coming right up to streets and crude sidewalks. In Chicago, for instance, Daniel Burnham’s famous network of grand boulevards which radiated from the downtown core piercing the neighborhoods with trees was influenced by the Arbor Day movement. Later the smaller boulevards—the local name for the strip of ground between the sidewalk and the street—were planted with trees, many by the CCC during the Great Depression. Not only did all of those trees greatly improve the look of the city, they helped dramatically clean the air and provided much needed shade that helped cool city folk through sweltering summers. Some sociologists even noted a reduction in crime in neighborhoods with trees.
Tree planting festivals have been traced by to the Spanish village of Villanueva de la Sierra in 1805 where a local Priest organized a three day fiesta around planting hundreds of trees. The custom spread to neighboring villages and towns.
In America Arbor Day was founded in 1872 by Democratic politician and later Secretary of Agriculture Julius Sterling Morton at Nebraska City, Nebraska. That first year 10,000 trees were planted in and around the community. Anyone who has ever visited Nebraska can attest to the crying need for trees on its vast High Plains. Morton’s son, Joy Morton, the founder of the Morton Salt Company in Chicago, shared his father’s enthusiasm and founded the Morton Arboretum in suburban Lyle centered on the grounds of his estate.
An Arbor Day tree planting in 1887. Looks to be on the grounds of a High Plains school.
The first observance drew national attention and soon other towns were emulating it. By 1883 the American Forestry Association officially endorsed Arbor Day and named Birdseye Northrop of Connecticut as Chairman of a committee to make the day an official national celebration. Birdseye, who liked to travel, also introduced the idea to Japan, Australia, Canada, and back to Europe.
In 1907 President Theodore Roosevelt issued an Arbor Day Proclamation to the School Children of the United States. It became an annual tradition. Eventually Congress designated the final Friday of April for the observance and several states made it a holiday.
In the early years the Boy Scouts were heavily mobilized for tree planting and many troops continue that tradition. As observed, the CCC and the WPA in conjunction with the National Forest Service were employed during the Depression.
Tree plantings continue, but the spotlight seldom shines on Arbor Day anymore.
But we can celebrate with poetry, naturally. Poets probably have been versifying about trees since the first bard plucked his lyre. Yet most of us can only recall Joyce Kilmer’s Trees. With apologies to Kilmer who was killed in the trenches of World War I just as his hymn to trees was becoming famous. It is a pretty bad poem filled with mixed and conflicting metaphors. We can do better.
Alan Keitt is a poet with a special interest in the intersection of spirituality and ecology. This poem and other work appeared in Gatherings: Seeking Ecopsychology, an on-line journal published in the early years of the current century.
A venrable live oak.
The Live Oak Chronicles
You came a volunteer
when the fires no longer scourged the wiregrass
and chased old gopher turtle down his hole
You saw it didn’t you—
The felling of the longleaf pines for the field
a hundred years ago
You heard the lathering mule grunt
as the straight plow hung on the grandaddy rock
You felt it didn’t you—
as they ringed your roots
with the rocky spawn of the field
You saw the rough stone pilings
and the raw cypress boards and battens
You saw it when the rusty roof was shiny new
and the Pecan trees were full of nuts
You heard it, didn’t you—
when the singing stopped and the prayers began
and all the laughter and the tears
You saw them leave
following mama's body
down the old mail road
for the last time
You saw us too—didn’t you
digging lighter stumps
to free the buried sunlight
of two centuries
in my stove
But at the center of your triune trunk
there came a moldering,
only a crack at first
One night, alone
with the abandoned house
and the fields fallow
your mossy beard
began to stream eastward
Was it a roiling front that came
or the summer's anvil cloud
You leaned with it
as a thousand times before
and just never came back up
Soon the last of your Siamese siblings
split off balance and wounded at the core
will lean its way one last time
And from the new light
above the ruin
of your descended majesty
the birds will come
as jewels for your shroud.
—Alan Keitt
Naomi Shihab Nye is an American, an Arab, a poet, a parent, and a woman of Texas. She is the daughter of a Palestinian father and an American mother and lived in Jerusalem, in St. Louis, and now with her own family in San Antonio, Texas.
Palestinian Fig tree.
My Father and the Fig Tree
For other fruits, my father was indifferent. gift of Allah!—on a branch so heavy it touches the ground. 1A trickster figure in Palestinian folktales –Naomi Shihab Nye Weeping Willow by Claude Monet Kathleen Lohr is a Los Angeles based poet and screenwriter whose work has appeared in local and regional literary magazines including The Moment, Red Dancefloor Press, For the Lives of Us, Dance of the Iguana, Blue Satellite, 50%, Poetry Motel, Shelia na Gig, and Chiron Review. The Weeping Tree When the wild mouths The earth tastes of silence While babies smell of jazz Inside bricked rooms Sides are chosen As time is laid aside —Kathleen Lohr All Watched Over By Machines of Loving Grace illustration by the author. We will end with that counter-cultural mystic Richard Brautigan who decades ago had this vision. All Watched Over By Machines Of Loving Grace I like to think (and —Richard Brautigan |
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