Skip to main content

History: United States of America State Trees

Preview of version: 56

state treasure
State Treasure by US Forest Service
For the United States of America, the state trees are symbols of pride from the West Coast to the East Coast and from the southern coastal shores and borders of the south to the northern border along the country of Canada, and to the Hawaiian Islands.

The concept of State Trees originated in 1893 as states were a relatively fresh idea. While at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago a women's congress suggested a "National Garland of Flowers" made of flowers representing each state.
Inhabitants from each state were to chose their state flower that reflected that part of the US of which they came from. The choices were then adopted by state legislators.

The idea was a success and soon after other natural treasures were adopted into each state as representations, state flowers, state fish, state birds, and more.1
Except for Hawaii, all the designated state trees are native to their land.

State Tree Year Scientific
Alabama Southern Longleaf Pine 1949 Pinus Pasustris
Alaska Sitka Spruce 1962 Picea Sitchensis (Bongard) Carriere
Arizona Palo Verde 1954
Arkansas Pine Tree 1939
California California Redwood 1937
Colorado Colorado Blue Spruce 1939
Connecticut White Oak 1947
Delaware American Holly 1939
Florida Sabal Palm 1953
Georgia Live Oak 1937
Hawaii Kukui or Candlenut 1959
Idaho Western White Pine 1935
Illinois White Oak 1973
Indiana Tulip Tree 1931
Iowa Oak 1961
Kansas Cottonwood 1937
Kentucky Tulip Poplar 1994
Louisiana Baldcypress 1963
Maine White Pine 1945
Maryland White Oak 1941
Massachusetts Elm 1941
Michigan White Pine 1955
Minnesota Red Pine or (Norway Pine) 1953
Mississippi Magnolia 1938
Missouri Flowering Dogwood 1955
Montana Ponderosa Pine 1949
Nebraska Eastern Cottonwood 1972
Nevada Single-Leaf Pinyon 1959
New Hampshire White Birch 1947
New Jersey Red Oak 1950
New Mexico Pinyon Pine 1949
New York Sugar Maple 1956
North Carolina Pine 1953
North Dakota American Elm 1947
Ohio The Buckeye 1953
Oklahoma Redbud 1937
Oregon The Douglas Fir 1939
Pennsylvania Hemlock 1931
Rhode Island Red Maple 1964
South Carolina Palmetto 1939
South Dakota Black Hills Spruce 1947
Tennessee Tulip Poplar 1947
Texas Pecan 1919
Utah Blue Spruce 1933
Vermont Sugar Maple 1949
Virginia American Dogwood 1956
Washington Western Hemlock 1947 Tsuga Heterophylla (Rafinesque) Sargent
West Virginia Sugar Maple 1949
Wisconsin Sugar Maple 1949
Wyoming Plains Cottonwood 1947

Links

1 “Do You Know Your State Tree?” TreeHugger, https://www.treehugger.com/natural-sciences/do-you-know-your-state-tree.html Accessed 4 Mar. 2019.

History

Information Version
02-13-2023 06:45 John Morris 72
08-07-2022 07:18 admin edited link loblolly 71
08-07-2022 07:16 admin added loblolly pine 70
08-07-2022 07:11 admin img Plugin modified by editor. 69
08-07-2022 07:11 admin added image 68
08-07-2022 07:01 admin added world columbian exposition link 67
11-28-2019 04:52 admin added pecan link 66
10-31-2019 03:40 admin removed line 65
03-07-2019 11:59 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 64
03-07-2019 11:59 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 63
03-07-2019 11:59 admin pipe 62
03-06-2019 03:26 admin break line 61
03-06-2019 03:25 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 60
03-06-2019 03:24 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 59
03-05-2019 12:56 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 58
03-05-2019 12:53 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 57
03-05-2019 12:52 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 56
03-05-2019 12:52 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 55
03-05-2019 12:51 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 54
03-05-2019 12:51 admin syntax 53
03-05-2019 12:49 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 52
03-04-2019 08:00 admin norway pine 51
03-04-2019 07:59 admin link 50
03-04-2019 07:06 admin links 49
03-04-2019 06:47 admin fancytable Plugin modified by editor. 48