September 01, 2017

Towering Oak Topples

One of the oldest and largest trees on campus came down in a storm the night of May 17, sending its resident family of squirrels scrambling to find a new home.

Professor of Biology Yaffa Grossman says the heritage bur oak tree that had stood to the northeast of Pearsons Hall measured 39 inches in diameter.

Grossman says that would make the tree approximately 250 years old, according to the tree size/age table developed by Marlin Bowles of the Morton Arboretum. Many other area trees were damaged in the storm, but the campus lost only this one, plus a limb from a shagbark hickory near the World Affairs Center.

The college kept the wood from the bur oak for a future use, while Grossman is considering planting a pollinator garden with her botany class in the spot where the oak tree once stood.


Also In This Issue

  • Naomi Wachs’99, shown above, is a Food for Peace Officer for USAID in Turkey, working on a team that provides humanitarian assistance inside Syria. Kenny Andejeski’12 is a program leader for Remote Year, a company that brings professionals, freelancers, adventurers, and entrepreneurs together to work and live in 12 cities across three continents during one year. He spent the summer months working in Europe.

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  • 5 Beloit Courses We’d Like to Take

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  • In Remembrance: Frank Caleb Blodgett’50, Life Trustee

    Remembering Frank Caleb Blodgett’50, Life Trustee

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  • Grace Ousley (1904) was the first African-American woman to graduate from Beloit College only nine years after the college opened its doors to women.

    They Made History

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