Tallest Tree in North America
Coast Redwood
Redwood National Park, California
girth: 26 feet — height: 369 feet
Tallest Tree in North America

PHOTO Oliver Koops 1997

Arborist Fred Breglia, President
New York Old Growth Forest Association
Preserving Our
Biggest Trees

"Trees are guardians of the Earth,
and we are the guardians of trees."

'Treeman' Ilan Shamir

Trees
are the largest plants on Earth.

Champion Trees
are the biggest specimen of their species:
The Giants of the Earth.

A Champion Tree is also often the eldest. Many were here before Columbus discovered America. Some survived hidden national forests and ancient old-growth forests. Others grow in public places, such as roadsides, front yards, golf courses, and university campuses. A few grow in private yards, urban open spaces and farm fields. One—the Bristlecone Pine in southern California—grew here when Jesus walked in Jerusalem.
National Champion
White Ash
Palisades, New York
National Champion White Ash, Palisades, New York
girth: 23.5 feet — height: 95 feet
crown spread: 82 feet
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Photos of Champion Trees Champion Tree
Photo Gallery
or click a tree photo to see it's data

These great green giants had the genetic wisdom and good luck to survive and thrive through recent centuries of industrialization, development, deforestation, windstorms, hurricanes, and other devastation. They may be among the hardiest, sturdiest, most resistant, best bred, best fed, and luckiest of their family and species. They are the gold medallists among their kind.
Champion Trees of Washington

These majestic specimens are rare, unique and precious natural resources. At the very least, a magnificent Champion Tree inspires awe. And they may just be essential to the health of Earth's ecosystems, the biodiversity of all species, and invaluable to the well-being of future generations of humans. In the new millennium's confrontation with global warming and climate change, trees are among our best, most essential allies to assure a healthy and habitable planet for future generations.

Yet, we are losing these great green giant beings. As many as a dozen a year succumb to wind, fire, development, pollution, insects, disease, chainsaws, vandalism, and other calamities. These irreplaceable natural resources are vanishing: today's champions are smaller than those of earlier centuries.
Colonial Champion
Washington Sycamores
"The largest trees known in America were the Washington Sycamores on Three Brother Island.
  "When George Washington visited Ohio Valley in 1771, he was amazed at their size, and estimated in his diary one was 61 feet in circumference."

page 20 of West Virginia
Guide to the Mountain State

©1941 Oxford University Press
sponsored by The Conservation Commission of West Virginia


National Champion
American Elm
Buckley, Michigan
David Milarch under the National Champion American Elm, Buckley, Michigan
girth: 23.5 feet — height: 112 feet
crown spread: 115 feet


The
Champion Tree Project
I n t e r n a t i o n a l

was founded in 1996

to protect, propagate and plant
a Living Legacy of our Champion Trees
space
David Milarch, founder, Champion Tree Project, January 1997 We can talk about the future,
we can dream about the future.
But if we really want a future,
we must act.

David Milarch, founder
The Champion Tree Project


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Champion Trees and Ancient Forestswww.championtrees.org — updated: 7/14/2002