| Examples
The
Wakefield Prison Mulberry Tree
In
one of the yards at Wakefield prison is a Mulberry Tree that is
thought to be over 250 years old.

This
tree is thought to be the one that is in the nursery rhyme, ‘Here
we go round the Mulberry Bush’.
The
rhyme started as a children’s game invented by washerwomen to
amuse and teach their children. The first version was probably
called ‘Here we go round the Bramble Bush’ which was chanted by
children in Yorkshire in the mid 18th century as they
danced round one child who was the ‘Bramble Bush’. At some stage
the ‘Bramble Bush’ would jump up and chase the other children,
if one of the others was caught then he or she would become the
‘Bramble Bush’ and the whole game would begin again.
In
the 1750’s (mid 18th century) Wakefield Jail had both
women and child prisoners, and since the Mulberry Bush was in
the grounds the rhyme was changed to suit the Caption to Mulberry
Bush location.
Does
anyone know any verses that were sung or chanted?

The
Castle Howard 'Armada Oaks'
This
oak tree is probably over 500 years old, it has lost its top and
many of its great branches, but it is still alive and living in
the car park at Castle Howard. There are eleven other oaks of
a similar age in the car park and it is said that they were planted
at the time of the ‘Spanish Armada’.

Grid
Ref: 711699
The
tree looks like one of the ‘Ents’ in Tolkein’s ‘Lord of the Rings’,
the trees that helped the Hobbits and their friends.
If
this old tree could tell a story, what do you think it would say?
Could you write a story for the tree?

Juniper
on the North Yorkshire Moors
The
Juniper is not very big, not particularly beautiful, and we don’t
know any stories about this one, but we think it’s a great tree
because it is quite rare on the North Yorkshire Moors. There used
to be many juniper trees, but moorland fires have destroyed them,
and sheep, rabbits and deer, have eaten the young seedlings.

Grid
Ref: 655074
Four
schools in North Yorkshire are helping to save the juniper by
collecting the seed to send to a nursery where the nursery man
grows the seeds into tiny trees. He then sends these to the schools
to plant out in the hills. The schools have to protect the small
trees from rabbits, sheep and deer by fencing off the plots where
they have planted them, and providing them with guards that fit
round them and protect them until they can survive without help.

Sweet
Chestnut Tree at Temple Newsam, Leeds
Thought
to be 350 years old. The surviving one of a pair planted at the
same time. Until October
2002 this was thought to be the oldest tree on Leeds City Council
property.

Local
folk lore says that the trees were planted as a memorial to two
still born infants. This
would suggest that the parents were connected in someway to Temple
Newsam.

Grid
Ref: SE357323 Temple Newsam, Leeds

English
Oaks at the medieval village of Colton
In
October 2002, these English Oaks were viewed by Ted Green MBE
(founder of the Ancient Tree Forum and Britain’s best known champion
of ancient trees).

Both
Ted and other experts present agreed that these old pollards would
have worked by the medieval villagers of Colton, to provide firewood,
fencing and building materials etc.

This judgement would make
the trees at least 600 years old and the oldest on Leeds City
property.

GridRef:
SE365323 - On the site of the deserted medieval village of Colton(Scheduled
Ancient Monument)

The
Laund Oak near Barden Bridge
The
Laund Oak – just by Laund House on the back road to Barden Bridge
and Storiths.

Grid
Ref: 057562(OSOutdoor Leisure series York South)

Sweet
Chestnut at Studley Royal
Sweet
Chestnut (Castanea sativa)

Close up of the
base of the above

Grid
Ref: 286698 (OS Expl.299) Studley Royal

Cherry
Tree at Studley Royal
This,
the largest wild cherry in Britain, measures 5.7 metres in girth
and grows in the landscaped gardens of Studley Royal, the setting
for the famous 12th century abbey ruins and now a World
Heritage Site.

Grid
Ref: 281697
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