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How old are trees in the Vanderbilt Arboretum?
Many of the trees on Vanderbilt Campus are very large. But how old are they? We know from analyzing old photos and records that only the Bicentennial Oak is certain to be older than the university. It is estimated to be at least 240 years old. But what about other large trees on campus? How old are they? 50 years? 100 years? 130 years?
HOLLAND MCTYEIRE, C. 1875source: United Methodist Publishing House via WikiMedia Commons |
“OLD MAIN” (NOW KIRKLAND HALL) IN 1875, THE YEAR IT WAS BUILT. NOTICE THE MANY SMALL TREES PLANTED IN THE FOREGROUND.source: Vanderbilt University Special Collections and University Archives photo PA.BLD.KIRH.102 |
Bishop McTyeire’s legacy
We know from historical records that many trees were planted on campus in the first years of the university. How did that come about? The massive tree-planting campaign was one of the labors of Biship Holland McTyeire, who was the major force behind the creation of Vanderbilt. “Within a decade the raw campus of 1875 was already graced by adolescent trees, some fifteen to twenty feet tall, most, except for a few older oaks, dating back to a beginning 1,500 trees planted by McTyeire. In large part these came through a gift of 450 plants by Thomas Meehan of New York, drawn from his great nurseries at Germantown, Pennsylvania. The 1878 university Register could list 306 varieties of tres and shrubs on campus, or what it called the Vanderbilt Arboretum. McTyeire lovingly supervised the planting of every new variety he could identify and procure. Some exotics did not survive the Nashville climate. The close spacing often required later thinning, as did new construction. Few of the original plantings remain on the present [1985] campus, with a handful of venerable magnolias most distinctive. But in an age before most private families indulged in landscape planning, or even bothered with shrubs or trees, the campus was a haven of loveliness. In their publications, students frequently remarked the beauty of the campus, particularly in the spring and fall, and noted that it became a favorite destination for Nashvillians out, in carriage or buggy, for a Sunday afternoon drive.”1 In addition to the nursery-grown trees provided by Meehan, “many were saplings taken from the hills of Hillsboro Pike and raised in an arboretum on campus.” 2
How many of the large trees on campus are “McTyeire legacy trees” and are therefore 130 years or more old? How big must a tree be to be that old? These are questions that could be answered definitively by dendrochronology (acquiring tree-ring samples) and that kind of analysis may be done on some of the arboretum trees in the future. But for now, we can examine historical photos of campus to make some guesses about this.
Example: bur oak on Library Lawn
A large bur oak (ID: 2-108) grows on library lawn just north of the retaining wall of Stevenson Center. Its trunk has a diameter of 95 cm, which makes it one of the larger trees on campus. Its size makes it a candidate to be a McTyeire legacy tree. To test this hypothesis, we can track this tree’s history back into time using aerial photos of the campus. It is possible to georectify these photos using visible features that are stable over time, such as sidewalks. One can then use GIS to overlay the tree layer from the campus database to see the condition of the tree in the past. In this case, it is easy because the main sidewalks on library lawn have been stable for at least 100 years.

LIBRARY LAWN, PRESENT. BUR OAK 2-108 MARKED BY ARROW.
Image courtesy of Vanderbilt GIS service

LIBRARY LAWN, 1959. BUR OAK 2-108 MARKED BY ARROW.
Image courtesy of Vanderbilt Facilities Information Serices

LIBRARY LAWN, 1948. LOCATION OF BUR OAK 2-108 MARKED BY ARROW.
Image courtesy of Vanderbilt University Special Collections and University Archives
Although bur oak 2-108 is a dominant feature of today’s Library Lawn, it was a small and inconsequential tree in 1959 and was not present at all in 1948. That means that an oak tree with a diameter of just under a meter can be as young as 60 years.
Although it seems like a simple task to look for today’s trees on old photos of the campus to determine the trees’ ages, it is actually difficult because as one goes further back in time there are fewer stable landmarks such as buildings. The target tree becomes smaller and there is an increase in the number of large trees that don’t exist in the present. But it can be done in a few cases where the tree is distinctive location.
Another example: red oak in front of USN
Although the University School of Nashville (USN) is not presently a part of Vanderbilt, it was formerly the Peabody Demonstration School and closely associated with the history of Peabody College. Until recently there was a large red oak tree with a diameter of 115.5 cm standing prominently in front of the school. (Unfortunately, this tree was cut down in about 2017.)

PEABODY DEMONSTRATION SCHOOL, 1925 (TOP) AND UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF NASHVILLE, 2014 (BOTTOM). NOTE THAT THERE IS NO SIGN OF THE LARGE RED OAK IN THE TOP IMAGE.
Top image from USN historical photos exhibit. Bottom image by Steve Baskauf
Careful examination of the 1925 image shows that there is no sign of the red oak tree, even as a tiny sapling. From this we can conclude that it is possible for an oak to attain a diameter of well over a meter in less than 90 years.
The Library Sentinels
So what can we conclude from this analysis so far? In order for an oak tree in the arboretum to be a McTyeire legacy tree, it probably would need to be over a meter in diameter. However, it would not necessarily have to be as large as 1.5 meters because the Bicentennial Oak has a diameter of 149 cm. To find candidate oaks, we should probably be looking for trees over a meter in diameter that are located in places where we can track them back in time on aerial photos by locating their position relative to stable geographic features.
We have a series of aerial photos taken from the southeast of campus from about 1930 through 1962. There are five large trees visible on these photos that can be tracked back through time:
2-247, the big southern magnolia on the left as you face the central library on Library Lawn;
2-437, a big shingle oak that is up against the south side of the central library;
2-609, another shingle oak that stood by the southeast corner of the library (more on its fate later);
2-795, the big willow oak by the library loading dock near the 21st Avenue S. crosswalk;
2-123, the massive southern red oak that stands in front of Godchaux Hall.
A sixth tree, the willow oak 2-1030 between the library and Benson Chapel, is more difficult to locate because of its position relative to the library and other trees. These trees are among the 30 largest trees on campus and the four surviving oaks are among the 12 largest oak trees in the arboretum.

Conclusions
If we accept the argument that the five oaks found near the central library were among the first 1,500 trees planted on campus in the late 1870s, what does that say about the size of 130 year-old oaks? The diameters of oaks 2-1030, 2-123, 2-795, and 2-437 are 135, 132, 117, and 114 cm respectively. Excluding the Bicentennial Oak, there are only four other oaks in that size range on the original Vanderbilt campus (128 cm Shumard oak 2-1021, 120 cm water oak 2-209, 117 cm white oak 2-161, and 115 cm black oak 2-584. So the “McTyeire legacy” oak club is probably a very exclusive one in the 21st century. More about magnolias on another page yet to come…
Epitaph for the sentinel 2-609
A few days before graduation in May of 2013, a storm caused a large part of the top of the shingle oak 2-609 to split off and fall onto the sidewalk between the library and Godchaux Hall. Within a day, the tree was down and its stump ground away to clean up the area before the arrival of the families of the graduates.
You can remember this tree that stood as a sentinal along 21st Avenue for over a hundred years when you see the cutout in the sidewalk that made room for its trunk and roots.
References
1 Conkin, Paul K. 1985. Gone with the Ivy: A Biography of Vanderbilt University, University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, p.74.
2 Doll, Gay Nelle. 2001. In the Company of Trees. Vanderbilt Magazine Winter/Spring 2001, p. 16-19.
Analysis by Steve Baskauf – 2014








