Friday, March 04, 2011
Linfield's Old Oak in photos
Even though the late great Old Oak on the Linfield campus is but a memory – see story below -- it still shows up in photos now and then. Here’s an example from www.westernoregonwaste.com. You can see Old Oak branches off to the left.
Linfield College landmark collapses
By Associated Press
January 9, 2008
MCMINNVILLE, Ore. (AP) - A proud symbol of Linfield College fell to its death. The Old Oak, an 80-foot-tall tree that had been standing since the college was founded more than a century ago, collapsed in a matter of seconds Tuesday. No one was injured.
The tree was estimated at 250 years old and was described by the first settlers to the valley. The oak was mature when Pioneer Hall opened in 1882, the first building on the new campus of then-McMinnville College. Pioneer Hall and the Old Oak became symbols of the college, and had been pictured together on everything from calendars to college stationery.
But the tree was starting to show its age. A consultant who examined the tree last year found an infestation of carpenter worms. The tree was labeled a hazard, because a branch could fall at anytime.
College officials took steps to keep the tree standing as long as possible, but crews planned to move the senior class bench, which was placed under the tree 60 years ago, to discourage people from getting too close.
"You could just tell," said John Hall, a botanist and the college's senior director of facilities. "You looked at the tree and saw how much dead wood accumulated each year. I knew the tree was on its way out, but that doesn't mean anything. It could last another 20 years."
But it didn't. Light rain was falling Tuesday afternoon, but there was no wind to explain the sudden collapse of the beloved oak. "Incredible," onlookers said as they gaped at the dome-shaped base of the tree, where spongy, rotten wood was visible.
College president Thomas L. Hellie requested the wood be saved. How the wood will be used hasn't been decided. In the past, the college has had fallen branches from the Old Oak fashioned into mementos and sports awards.