The Mark Twain Tree was a giant sequoia tree located in the Big Stump Forest of Kings Canyon National Park. It was named after the American writer and humorist Mark Twain. It had a diameter of 16 feet (4.9 meters) and was 1,341 years old when it was felled in 1891 for the American Museum of Natural History as an exhibition tree.

The process of felling the tree took 13 days and was carried out by lumbermen Bill Mills and S.D. Phips, with assistance from Barney and John Lukey. The tree was later shipped to the American Museum of Natural History in New York and the British Museum in London at the expense of Collis P. Huntington, the president of the Southern Pacific. Despite the establishment of the Sequoia National Park, access to the sequoia groves was difficult and the existence of such large trees was not widely believed at the time.

Big Stump

The Mark Twain stump, the remains of the tree, are preserved as part of the Big Stump Picnic Area in Kings Canyon National Park. The stump is near the entrance to Grant Grove.

See also

  • List of largest giant sequoias
  • List of individual trees

References


Sittengemälde Mark Twain hatte in Deutschland viel zu staunen WELT

Texas Gypsies The Big Stump of the Mark Twain tree and other Sequoia

Mark Twain Zitate Weisheit & Witz Entdecken

24 Mark Twain Tree Stock Photos, HighRes Pictures, and Images Getty

Texas Gypsies The Big Stump of the Mark Twain tree and other Sequoia