Have you seen the 5 trees that helped make Topeka what it is today? Celebrate them Arbor Day. – The Topeka Capital-Journal

Posted: April 29, 2022 at 3:38 pm

The gnarled old locust tree standing at the southeast corner of S.W. Huntoon and Clay is the oldest tree in Topeka,according toa plaque located there.

That tree is among fivesignificant Topekatrees or groups of trees The Capital-Journal is recognizing to markArbor Day, which isFriday.

Here is the list:

Thirty-twostudents in an eighth-grade class at nearby Central Park School arranged for theplaque identifying it as Topeka's oldest tree to be attached in 1913 to the tree at S.W. Huntoon and Clay, according to the website of the Kansas Historical Society.

Theplaque was latermoved to a place on the ground near the tree's base, that site says.

"Believed to date from the city's early history, the tree may have been full-grown when Kansas was opened as a territory in 1854," itsays. "Trees commonly were planted as guideposts along the trail that carried travelers from Fort Leavenworth to theSanta Fe Trailjunction near Burlingame."

More: Jennie Chinn, who died Saturday, ran Kansas Historical Society for 18 years. Her job gave her joy.

The locust tree drew students'attention after it was mentionedin"The Price of the Prairie," a book about post-Civil War settlers in Kansaspublished in 1910 by Margaret Hill McCarter, the namesake for McCarter Elementary School at5512 S.W. 16th.

The historical society website says awoman who taughtat Central Park School in 1913saidthe tree might not have been the area's oldest, but"it was supposed to be the oldest tree between the Statehouse and Shunganunga Creek to the southwest."

City forester Travis Tenbrink said Topeka's city government has no official record or documentation of thetree's being Topeka's oldest,buthe has no reason to doubt that.

"We continue to trim the tree as needed, and actually have it on our schedule to be trimmed in the next few months," he said. "We are also planning to do some chemical treatments to help support, and hopefully improve the root system of the tree."

For more than a century, a massive, 90-foot-tall cottonwood tree stood on the Kansas Statehouse grounds, just southeast of the Capitol.

The historicalsociety website says legend has it that the tree grew from a stakeworkers drove into the ground while building the Statehouse. Another account says the treewas already present as a sapling when construction of the Statehouse began in 1866.

Kansas legislators, perhaps inspired by its nearby presence, voted in 1937 to choose the cottonwood as the Kansas State Tree.

The Statehouse cottonwood survived Topekas historic 1966 tornado, though it was badly damaged. Tree surgeons replaced a large piece of its trunk with concrete in an effort to keep it alive.

In the years that followed, the tree slowly died.All branches above the main trunk were cut down in 1983. The stump was removed in 1984.

More: What happened to Amelia Earhart? This $15 million Kansas museum will honor the pilot's legacy

Claire Swogger's favorite tree was the redbud.

The Topeka woman and her husband,Kaw Valley Bank & Trust Co. owner Glenn Swogger, consequentlygave the name "Redbud Foundation" to the philanthropic organization they formedto benefit various causes.

Thoseincluded creating Redbud Park, a public gathering place that features various redbud trees.

The park is located on the site of what used to be a parking lotat the southeast corner of N. Kansas Avenue and Gordon, in downtown North Topeka's NOTO ArtsDistrict.

Claire Swogger died in 2017, but Glenn Swogger survived long enough to takepart inribbon-cutting ceremonies held at the park in 2019. He died last August.

Tenmonths afterthe 1966 tornado killed many trees in Topeka, Fidelity State Bank & Trust Co. began a 53-year Arbor Day tradition of giving awayseedlings it had bought.

We started giving out trees in the lobby of the bank, the bank's late president and CEO, Anderson Chandler,told The Capital-Journal in 2016.We only had two locations then. By the next year, we decided that the best way to get more trees planted was to give them to schools.

The tradition continued through 2020.

Members of the Topeka History Geeks Facebook group spoke positivelythis past week on that site of the role in that effort playedby Chandler, who died in 2019.

"He was a very community-oriented businessman and a great Topeka citizen," said Topekan Kurt Kieffer.

The late Capital City Bank president Frank Sabatinispearheaded efforts to create and develop the Lake Shawnee Arboretum, which contains numerous trees and stands just southwest of S.E. 37th and West Edge Road.

The site was an open fieldwhenSabatiniset out in 1993 to make it anarboretum. That arboretumwas dedicated in 1997.

"Emotionally, it's just kind of a dream come true for me to leave some kind of legacy," Sabatini told The Capital-Journal at rededication ceremonies held in 2005.

Sabatini died in October.

The Kansas Forest Service says Topeka is the location of five "champion" trees, which are the largest of their type in Kansas.A report on the KFwebsitesaysthose trees are as follows:

Tim Hrenchir can be reached at threnchir@gannett.com or 785-213-5934.

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Have you seen the 5 trees that helped make Topeka what it is today? Celebrate them Arbor Day. - The Topeka Capital-Journal

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