Thank you for visiting SNEWPapers!
Sign up freeWashington Telegraph
Washington, Hempstead County, Arkansas
What is this article about?
A massive California tree, 300 feet high and estimated at 6,500 years old, is being prepared by removing its bark in sections to ship to the World's Fair for exhibiting specimens. Discovered near Murphy's Camp, it measures 98 feet in circumference at the base.
OCR Quality
Full Text
The following account of a noble tree and its ignoble fate has been transmitted to this part of the Union from California. The tree was discovered about twenty miles from a place called Murphy's Camp :—
"It measures at the ground ninety-eight feet in circumference, eighty-five ft. at ten ft. from the earth, which size it holds for 100 ft. It is 300 ft. high, though the top has been broken off. There are many trees in this vicinity higher than that, from 50 to 60 feet in circumference. It is estimated that this tree would square 25 ft. at the butt, and consequently a cut of 12 ft. in length would make ninety thousand feet of lumber. A party of men are now at work in taking off the bark, for 50 ft. in height in sections, so that it can be put together again. It is about one foot in thickness, and will be sent to the World's Fair, where it will be put up, and have the California specimens exhibited in it. Thirty feet in diameter is quite a room, large enough to hold political mass meetings in just before a presidential election.
"It is estimated by those who have counted the rings, that the tree is not less than 6,500 years old, or five hundred years older than this world, according to the vulgar notion. It must have been something of a tree when Adam and Eve went round to name the productions of the forest."
What sub-type of article is it?
What themes does it cover?
What keywords are associated?
Where did it happen?
Story Details
Location
About Twenty Miles From Murphy's Camp, California
Story Details
A giant tree discovered in California, measuring 98 feet in circumference at the base and 300 feet high, estimated at 6,500 years old, has its bark removed in sections by a party of men to be reassembled at the World's Fair for exhibiting California specimens.