Joe,

Actually the crown looked ok, but it apparently did not make many nuts this 
year, unlike most of the beech trees in the area.  I am not worried about it 
dying, so much as falling over.  It does not appear to be structurally sound 
and it is adjacent to a city pumping station open area.

Ed

"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. "
Robert Frost (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Joseph Zorzin 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2008 7:05 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: The Bible Tree


  Ed., how's the crown look? Though it may be severely hollow, it can possibly 
still survive much longer than we're likely to survive- if it has a healthy 
crown. The hollowness, in and of itself, is not necessarily an indication of 
longevity.

  Joe

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Edward Frank 
    To: ENTS Google 
    Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2008 6:48 PM
    Subject: [ENTS] The Bible Tree


    ENTS,

    I spent the morning and afternoon with archaeologists, historians, and 
interested members of the local community visiting a series of "Scripture 
Rocks"  In the area around Brookville, PA.  One account of the rocks reads as 
follows, "In the early 1900's, 500 rock carvings were cut by Douglas Stahlman, 
a Brookville man who believed he had a vision instructing him to carry out that 
mission.  Stahlman was born in Kirkman, Jefferson County in 1861, graduated 
from the Erie Commercial School, and died in Pittsburgh in 1942. Stahlman 
removed himself from society and lived among the rocks above Mill Creek. At one 
point he conducted church services at a rock he had named appropriately "Alter 
Rock".  Each rock carries some biblical inscription and was named by Stahlman. 
In a journal he cataloged each stone and its approximate location. When he 
completed his project, the carvings stretched roughly in an arc around 
Brookville from the old Northfork Park north of the town to Tunnel Hill south 
of Brookville. - Nicole Park"  Ken Burkett, a local archaeologist and others 
are organizing a project to document the character and locations of these rocks 
located at many known, and likely many unknown sites in the area.

     

    What may be of more interest to a tree group like ENTS is that he also 
carved verses into trees in the area.  I am given to understand he preferred 
American beech trees because of their smooth bark.  Of the many tree she 
carved, one is know to remain.  I had the opportunity to measure and photograph 
this tree, known as the Bible Tree today.  The tree is in severely hollow, and 
I do not believe it will last much longer.  

    Measurements:  Girth 10.3 feet, height 81 feet.  

    I am guessing the tree may be 150 years old at least, given that the 
carvings were done almost 100 years ago, circa 1912, and the tree must have 
been large at the time it was carved.  More detailed documentation of the tree 
is one of the higher priorities of the proposed project as carvings in tree 
tend to be more ephemeral than those in stone.  The other Bible trees have been 
lost already.

    Ed Frank 


    "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. "
    Robert Frost (1874-1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 
    


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