Saturday, April 13, 2024

The Future of Johns Island’s Iconic Angel Oak Tree

 

 

At April’s Seabrook Island Garden Club meeting, Samantha Siegel, Angel Oak Preserve Director at Lowcountry Land Trust, provided members with an overview of the plans to preserve this beloved Johns Island landmark. The tree is a popular tourist destination, largely due to the claim that it is the oldest living tree east of the Mississippi River. While the exact age of the tree is unknown, estimates of its age range from 400 to 1,500 years old. The beloved Southern live oak stands 66 1/2 feet tall, with a 28-foot trunk circumference and large sloping branches that shade an area over 17,000 square feet. Resurrection ferns grow along the limbs, giving the tree a lush green appearance year-round. Each year an estimated 400,000+ people come to view the tree and enjoy the site.

 

As a young college student, Samantha often drove out to Johns Island to sit under the Angel Oak and enjoy the tranquility of the small city park surrounding the tree. In 2008, after learning the wooded area surrounding the Angel Oak was on track to be leveled and developed as a 600-unit apartment and retail shopping complex, Samantha founded the “Save the Angel Oak” organization. She garnered a lot of support from individuals and conservation groups to block the development and explore options for conserving the land. In 2013 she partnered with Lowcountry Land Trust to raise $7 million to purchase 35 acres of land that surrounds the tree on three sides. More than 12,000 donors, plus contributions from the South Carolina Conservation Bank and the Charleston County Greenbelt Program, enabled them to quickly acquire the land. This purchase and the nine-acre park owned by the City of Charleston formed the new proposed 44-acre Angel Oak Preserve.

 

Plans for the Preserve include raising awareness of the Gullah-Geechee and Native American history of Johns Island. Some of the artifacts found on the property are believed to date back 8,000 years, and some speculate the tree might have been a ceremonial meeting place for the Native Americans that inhabited the Sea Islands. Significant portions of the land surrounding the tree were acquired by the Waight family in the late 1600s. By the early 1700s, the family was operating a large plantation where they grew corn, cotton, and rice. Records indicate the plantation had about 80 slaves; historians believe some of their living quarters were near the tree. One of the Waight daughters eventually married into the Angel family, and it is believed this is how the tree came to be known as the Angel Oak.

 

Following the Civil War, the Angel family continued to grow cotton until 1904. After that, they left the portion of the property where the tree was located open to the public. According to Charleston civil rights activist Septima Clark, who was a teacher on Johns Island, the tree was a gathering place for all. “Segregation was at its height, but the tree was not segregated,” she recalled. She would bring her school children out for the day to picnic and play under the tree. According to Septima Clark’s account, some believed angels brought spirits to the tree, and the spirits could see the things that happened there during slavery. Others believed the tree was part of the Underground Railroad system that helped slaves escape by hiding in the lush branches during the day and continuing their journey at night. Rather than being named after the Angel family, many believe it was named after the angels that frequented the area and protected the people.

 

Samantha has not only worked to uncover the property's history but continues to secure additional funding to move forward with a master plan for the site. The plan includes a boardwalk designed to protect the tree's root system, walking trails, an information center, improved parking, signage to celebrate the history and significance of the land, and an outdoor educational area. The Angel Oak Preserve is expected to break ground in 2025, with an estimated total cost of around $8 million. Additional fundraising efforts are currently underway. To donate, please visit give.lowcountrytrust.org.

 

—Submitted by Susan McLaughlin

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