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Omar Bradley Oak

Omar Bradley Oak

Omar Bradley Oak

The family traveled to Pennsylvania today. It’s always good to get everyone together but today was a mixture of joy and sadness. Joy because we were with family, outdoors on a cool day in May. Sad because we came to bury Albert’s ashes. We decided that it would be appropriate to bury them under this large tree, a North American white oak (Quercus alba, not to be confused with the English white or common oak, Q. robur). Based on its circumference, estimates of its age range from about 250 to over 300 years, although we’ve never had it actually dated with a core sample. We’ll just continue to assert it predates the American Revolution.

We used to have a tire swing on this tree and in the 1960s we camped near by in the field that later came to be called the Christmas Tree Field. It’s now difficult to see where the woods ended and the field began, as it’s all pretty much grown up with trees, although there is still a wood duck house on a tree that’s near what was the edge of the field. After we started camping in what is now the yard, we didn’t get over to the tree quite as often.

As for the name of the tree, that was given by some neighbors shortly after the death in 1981 of General Omar Bradley. There is, in some circles, a tradition of naming large oaks after generals and when one of the neighbors mentioned the name to dad, he liked it and it’s pretty much stuck. It’s all very unofficial, of course and this tree is just in the woods on our property, not in a park or other public place. Omar Bradley was the last of nine five-star officers in the US military, having been promoted to General of the Army in September, 1950. Only George Washington and John Pershing, Generals of the Armies (plural) have ranked higher than the nine five-star officers.

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The Omar Bradley Oak

The Omar Bradley Oak

The Omar Bradley Oak

It’s traditional to name oak trees after generals and this one in Adams County, Pennsylvania was named by our neighbors the Omar Bradley Oak. Omar Bradley (February 12, 1893 – April 8, 1981) was nicknamed ‘The G.I’s General’ and was the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. We have accepted that name, although it is not in any way official, of course. I doubt anyone but us knows anything about the tree, much less that it bears that name.

It’s an old tree, probably at least 250 years old, but possibly older. The tree has a circumference of 13 feet 4 inches, or 160 inches (measured two years ago in 2024). That makes the diameter 50.93 inches. Multiplying that by a growth factor of 5, the age comes out to 255 years, meaning that the tree started growing around 1769, just before the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

We’ve talked about building a stone bench near the tree and creating a little grove. I’ve recently planted some (native) ferns in the area, as well.

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