ENTS,
Yesterday I took a quick roadtrip to measure the Friendship Elm, as I call it.
To get to where that tree is from here, I have to drive through the little 
village of Lower Bank, in Washington Township (Burlington County). Lower Bank 
dates to the early 18th century. In front of one house there is a huge oak 
tree. The house next door has another, which is almost as big. I and some 
friends were in Lower Bank a few years ago, admiring the bigger of the two 
trees, when I woman through open her upstairs window and asked if we were 
admiring her tree. We said yes, and she explained that a naturalist came by one 
day, asking if he could core it to see how old it was. She told us that she 
wouldn't let him, and that the naturalist had to take his best guess. She told 
us that he had said 375 years. That seems too old for the size of the tree, and 
too old for the age of the village. My memory may be off a bit, and she may 
have actually told us 275. I'm not sure. At any rate, I took some pictures 
through the windshield of my truck yesterday on my
 way up to Friendship. One day maybe I will stop by and ask if I could measure 
the CBH. I will send a couple pictures later.

So I went on to Friendship. Frienship is in the far northern part of Wharton 
State Forest, and is a ghost town. It was a small village associated with a 
cranberry growing business called Frienship Bogs, which shut down in the mid 
20th Century. The last two families to live there moved out in the late 1950s, 
or possibly the early 1960s. The few buildings were subsequently burned down by 
arsonists, very soon after. What you can find there today is a grassy field 
full of cellar holes and foundations, with a nice, good sized Elm tree in it, 
along with some younger Pitch Pines and a few Yucca plants. Surrounding this 
field are regular Pine Barrens forests and cedar swamps, along with all the old 
Friendship Bogs. I measured the Elm tree at 8' 4" CBH. I will send a photo of 
it later.  Incidentally, I measured a large Pitch Pine there with a CBH of 5' 
10 1/2". The top is broken off and laying on the ground nearby, and the tree 
has a large scar on the trunk
 from the ground up.
 
Also if I can find it, I've got a photo of a nice Colonial Revival house on US 
30 in Egg Harbor City that had two beautiful Elm trees in front of it. 
Unfortunately the Elm trees died several years ago. I'm not sure if it was due 
to drought, or Dutch Elm Disease or what. What's left are the two stumps, which 
reach as high as the second story windows on the house.
 
Barry
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Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org

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