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| A Sugar Maple in the Hopewell
Cemetery has been determined to be the largest such tree in
Tennessee. We asked Knoxville Sentinel
columnist Sam Venable if we could re-publish his column from
March 4, 2007. His response was "No problem. Indeed, I'm
happy to keep Bert's name in print--even if he is pushing up
posies, or trees as the case may be.......just credit my
column in the News Sentinel, 3/4/07...many thanks, sv." |
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We thank you Sam! Here it is folks.....the true
story of the tree that will add Dandridge to the record books.
A Record Right Over Bert’s Nose
If Bert Vincent could sit up in his grave, he’d
see one heck of a story. Bert — the News
Sentinel’s beloved “Strolling” columnist who died in 1969 — is
buried alongside his wife, Ellen Hynds Vincent, in Dandridge’s
Hopewell Cemetery. Just to the east of their graves is the story: a
magnificent sugar maple 69 feet tall, with a crown that spreads 77
feet to its widest tip. The trunk of this behemoth measures 56.2
inches in diameter and 14.7 feet in circumference.
But hold on a minute. I’m getting ahead of myself.
I’d come to Dandridge with Jim Cortese, a Knoxville tree specialist,
to check on a potential candidate for Tennessee’s record-tree list.
It’s a giant white oak growing in a thicket, roughly 300 yards west
of the cemetery. A friend had pointed it out to me, and I contacted
Jim, who keeps tabs on these things. Soon as we walked to the site,
Jim whistled and remarked, "That’s a humdinger!” He set about the
task of measuring. Here’s his tally: trunk 16.37 feet in
circumference, 62.5 inches in diameter; height 102 feet; crown
spread 108 feet.
Without elaborate testing, the exact age of this
tree can’t be determined. But Jim is certain it dates to the
Revolutionary War era. Think about that. Smack in the middle of
Jefferson County is a link to history — a tree that was fully mature
long before Union and Confederate forces
met in combat, long before the birth of aviation. And it’s alive and
prospering.
We left the thicket and were nearly back to Jim’s
car when I said, “Let me show you Bert
Vincent’s grave.” We stepped across the ditch and were standing at
the Vincent headstone when Jim whistled again. And reached for his
tree-measuring tools again. He marched over to
the aforementioned sugar maple and recorded its statistics. "That’s
a mighty big sugar maple,” he said, estimating it as Civil War era.
“I’ll see how it stacks up against the record holders, too.”
Back home, Jim consulted the Tennessee Division of
Forestry’s official list. Lo and behold, he did have a new entry.
Just not the one he had come to see. Turns out that the white oak,
monstrous as it may be, is smaller than one growing in Union County.
But the sugar maple
near Bert’s and Miss Ellen’s graves blew the existing record (from
Sullivan County) off the charts. As we speak, Jim is in the process
of notifying forestry officials of this new champ.
It’s interesting enough that a record sugar maple
casts a shadow across the grave of one of East Tennessee’s
journalism icons. As Jim noted with a chuckle, “Bert’s been
fertilizing that tree for quite awhile.”
But get this: While browsing through Bert’s file
at the News Sentinel, I came across a story from Sept. 29, 1969.
Written by the late Willard Yarbrough, it described Bert’s funeral.
“The maple’s green was turning crimson,” Willard reported. “Soon the
red and golden leaves would fall and swirl atop his grave.” And 38
years later generate another story.
Sam Venable’s column appears on Sundays,
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. He may be reached at 865-342-6272
or venob@knews.com. His latest book, “You Gotta Laugh to Keep from
Cryin’: A Baby Boomer Contemplates Life Beyond Fifty,” is available
at most bookstores
and online from the News Sentinel.

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