The Great British Trees were 50 trees selected by The Tree Council in 2002 to spotlight trees in the United Kingdom in honour of the Queen's Golden Jubilee.[1]
England

Tolpuddle Martyrs Tree
Western England
- Tortworth Chestnut in Tortworth, Gloucestershire
 - Westonbirt Lime Tree in Westonbirt Arboretum, Gloucestershire
 - Sweet Chestnut in Croft Castle, Herefordshire
 - Royal Oak in Boscobel, Shropshire
 - The Bewdley Sweet Chestnut in Bewdley, Worcestershire
 
South West
- Domesday Oak in Ashton Court, Bristol
 - Darley Oak, Upton Cross, Linkinhorne, Cornwall
 - Bicton College Monkey Puzzle in Bicton Park, East Budleigh, Devon
 - Heavitree Yew in Heavitree, near Exeter, Devon
 - Ashbrittle Yew in Ashbrittle, Wellington, Somerset
 
Southern England

Wellingtonias were named in honour of the first Duke of Wellington, having been introduced to this country in 1853, a year after his death. The parent tree here was planted in 1857 by the second Duchess.
- Brighton Pavilion Elm in Brighton, East Sussex
 - Queen Elizabeth Oak in Cowdray Park, Midhurst, West Sussex
 - Selborne Yew in Selborne, Hampshire
 - Wellington's Wellingtonia, a Giant Sequoia, in Stratfield Saye, Hampshire
 - Tolpuddle Martyrs Tree in Dorset
 - Big Belly Oak in Savernake Forest, Wiltshire
 
London and the Home Counties

Great Oak in Panshanger Park
- The Cage Pollard in Burnham Beeches, Buckinghamshire
 - Ankerwycke Yew in Wraysbury, Berkshire
 - The World's End Black Poplar in Roydon, Essex
 - The Great Oak, Panshanger Park in Hertingfordbury, Hertfordshire
 - Sidney Oak in Penshurst Place, Kent
 - Sweet chestnut 'The Seven Sisters Chestnut' in Viceroy's Wood, Penshurst, Kent[2] NOTE this is not in the Tree Council’s original list.
 - Charlton House Mulberry in Greenwich
 - 'Old Lion' Ginkgo in Kew Gardens, Richmond, London
 - Crowhurst Yew in Surrey
 
Eastern England

Newton's Apple Tree, Woolsthorpe Manor
- Metasequoia at Emmanuel College, Britain's first Dawn Redwood, in Cambridge University Botanic Garden
 - Great London Plane of Ely, Britain's first London Plane in Ely, Cambridgeshire
 - Newton's Apple Tree in Woolsthorpe Manor, Grantham, Lincolnshire
 - Bowthorpe Oak in Bourne, Lincolnshire
 - Kett's Oak in Hethersett, Norfolk
 - Chedgrave Jubilee Oak in Norfolk
 
The Midlands
- Morton Horse Chestnut in Derbyshire
 - Lebanon Cedar in Childrey, Oxfordshire
 - Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire
 - Original Bramley apple in Southwell, Nottinghamshire
 
Northern England

Holker Lime
- The Appleton Thorn Tree in Appleton Thorn, Cheshire
 - Marton Oak in Marton, Cheshire
 - Borrowdale Yew in Cumbria
 - Levens Hall Yew in Levens Hall, Cumbria
 - Holker Lime in Holker Hall, Cumbria
 - Wild Cherry in Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal, near Ripon, North Yorkshire
 
Northern Ireland
- Great Yew, a pair of yews now appearing to be a single tree, in Crom Castle, Fermanagh
 
Scotland

Capon Tree plaque
- Granny Pine, a 300-year-old Scots Pine at Glen Affric, Highlands
 - Fortingall Yew, a 2,000-3,000-year-old yew in Perth and Kinross
 - Arbutus Tree, a tree likely grown from a seed collected in North America by surgeon-botanist Archibald Menzies in the late 1700s near Castle Menzies Gardens NOTE This is not in the Tree Council’s original list
 

Arbutus Tree
- Parent Larch, a European Larch in the grounds of a Hilton hotel built by the Duke of Atholl in Dunkeld, Perth and Kinross
 - A Douglas-fir, in the grounds of Scone Palace where David Douglas was born, in Perth and Kinross
 - A silver fir, in Ardkinglas Woodland Garden, Argyll
 - Capon Tree, an oak in what used to be the Jedforest, Jedburgh, Borders
 - The Craigends Yew, a 600-year-old layering Taxus baccata in Houston, Renfrewshire NOTE This is not in the Tree Council’s original list.
 
Wales
- Ley's Whitebeam, one of only 16 Sorbus leyana (a type of whitebeam) growing wild anywhere, in Merthyr Tydfil
 - Pontfadog Oak, with a girth of 12.9 metres (42 ft), the largest Sessile oak in Wales, in Pontfadog, Wrexham. The tree was blown over by the wind in 2013.
 - Llangernyw Yew, the oldest tree in Europe (Between 4,000 and 5,000 years old),[3] a yew in the churchyard of St Digain’s, Llangernyw, Conwy
 - Defynnog Yew, Powys, Wales. A tree once estimated at 5,000 years old with evidence now suggesting a maximum of 2,500. NOTE it was not in the original list.
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Fifty Great Trees for Fifty Great Years". The Tree Council. Archived from the original on 6 January 2003. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
 - ↑ "Sweet chestnut 'The Seven Sisters Chestnut' in Viceroy's Wood in Penshurst". Retrieved 2 September 2020.
 - ↑ Bevan-Jones, Robert (2004). The ancient yew: a history of Taxus baccata. Bollington: Windgather Press. ISBN 0-9545575-3-0.
 
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great British Trees.
- Great British Trees press release
 
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