Arbutus Oak Explained

Arbutus Oak
Species:White oak
Binomial:Quercus alba
Location:Arbutus, Maryland
Coordinates:39.2509°N -76.6825°W
Seeded:c.
Custodian:Arbutus Community Association

The Arbutus Oak was a large white oak tree in Arbutus, Maryland, situated in the southwest corner of the I-695/I-95 interchange approximately four miles southwest of Baltimore. It split and half and fell in 2019, due to internal decay that caused its trunk to become unstable. At that time, it was thought to be 329 years old.[1]

Significance

The Arbutus Oak was over tall and about in diameter, making it one of Maryland's largest and oldest white oak trees.[2] It has been said that General Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette passed by the oak tree in 1781 with his troops while en route to Elkridge during the Revolutionary War.[3] When the highway interchange was being constructed in the 1950s, the government found Native American artifacts surrounding the tree.[4] The historic nature of the tree prompted highway planners to adjust the highway ramp southward in order to save the tree.[5]

Site

Located on Maryland State Highway Administration property and surrounded by interstate freeways and ramps, the tree was inaccessible to the general public. The tree and a sign bearing its name were visible to motorists on I-95 southbound, just south of the I-695 underpass.

The Arbutus Lion's Club installed a fence around the tree in 1972. A plaque on the fence reads:

Emanuel Wade, the original landowner of the area on which the tree stood, is buried in the vicinity of the tree; his gravestone was moved from its original location to inside the fence that surrounded the tree.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Boteler. Cody. 2019-09-23. Hidden among the highways, three-century-old Arbutus Oak tree split and fell this summer. The Baltimore Sun. 2021-06-29.
  2. Web site: The Historic Oak Tree in the Middle of I-95. 2021-06-29. Atlas Obscura. en.
  3. Web site: Goldfarb. Bruce. 2010-11-02. Historic Arbutus Oak is Hidden in Plain Sight. live. 2021-06-29. Patch. https://web.archive.org/web/20181010011256/https://patch.com/maryland/arbutus/historic-arbutus-oak-is-hidden-in-plain-sight . 2018-10-10 .
  4. Web site: 2018-05-22. What Happened to the Arbutus Oak?. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20180830154144/http://arbutus.life/2018/05/22/what-happened-to-the-arbutus-oak/. 2018-08-30. Arbutus Life.
  5. News: Shields. Gerald. 2002-04-20. Arbutus Oak at root of community. The Baltimore Sun. 2021-06-29.