© Copyright Andrew Curtis and licensed for
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When our esteemed local hero, Cuthbert Collingwood, was
elevated to the status of ‘Lord’ in the aftermath of the Battle of Trafalgar,
he became ‘Baron Collingwood, of Caldburne and Hethpool, in the County of
Northumberland’. And, being in possession of a fair old chunk of the lower
College Valley, he determined to take advantage of the fact and do his bit for
the future of the Royal Navy.
Collingwood, you see, was mad keen on planting acorns – with
a view to ensuring the future supply of English Oak for the replenishing of the
Fleet. When he was home on leave he would often be seen wandering the hills
with his dog, Bounce, and a pocket full of acorns. He would plant and scatter
them here and there as he went – and would encourage his friends and
acquaintances to do likewise.
It seems he had great plans for his patch of real estate in
the Cheviots; but when he died a few short years later in 1810, well, his grand
design seemed destined never to leave the drawing board. However, his widow, Sarah,
stepped into the breach and made quite sure that her husband’s final wish came
true. For, in 1815, she oversaw the planting of 200 oak trees on the flank of
The Bell, on the western bank of the College Burn, near Hethpool. One for every
ship in the Royal Navy, it was said.
The great oak wood was never needed, of course, as warship
technology moved on to iron-clad vessels and beyond. And so the Collingwood
Oaks were allowed to mature into the 200-year-old beauties we see today.
Note: On the other side of the road which runs up the
valley – directly opposite the Collingwood Oaks – was planted another wood in
2005. Called the ‘Trafalgar Wood’, it was created to mark the 200th
anniversary of the famous battle. Oaks, of course.
Handsomely
ReplyDeleteThe only country in the world where this could happen. And I say this as a non-Brit. Well done Admiral Collingwood, well done Sarah Collingwood, and well done those who came after. Great article, too.
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DeleteThe French and Swedes planted more systematically.
Deletehttps://www.atlasobscura.com/places/visingso-oak-forest
More here: https://kathleenpennellsposts.quora.com/In-the-1830s-the-Swedish-Navy-planted-300-000-oak-trees-to-be-used-for-ship-production-in-the-far-future-When-they-rece?ch=10&oid=72304166&share=fa21a84b&srid=nGjc&target_type=post
Deletewe need more tree planters now!! if we are to save our environment and our future in it.
ReplyDeletePrecisely.
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