322 The Trees of Great Britain and iFeland 



Marquess of Exeter. The best, known as the King Oak, is lOO feet high by i6 feet 

 6 inches in girth. At Ashridge the oaks are not so fine as the beeches, but the King 

 Oak in that park is a splendid tree, measuring 98 feet by 2 1 feet 8 inches. 



Sherwood Forest, in Nottinghamshire, contains an immense number of very 

 ancient, picturesque, and curious oaks, many of them now mere wrecks, but pre- 

 served with care by Earl Manvers, who is the owner of a large area of the unenclosed 

 part of what was formerly a royal forest. I have seen no other place where so 

 many of the trees are covered with immense burrs, and where they assume such 

 extraordinary shapes, as in that part of Sherwood Forest between Edwinstowe and 

 the Buck gate entrance to Thoresby Park. The soil in this district is mostly a poor- 

 looking sand on which the birch thrives remarkably. About seventy years ago the 

 open forest which up to that time had been grazed by sheep, came into the 

 possession of Lord Manvers. An immense quantity of seedling birch then sprang 

 up, and large quantities of acorns were sown to fill up the vacant spaces caused by 

 the decay of the old oaks, most of which are now stag-headed, and dead at the top. 



The finest oak now standing in Sherwood Forest is the Queen or Major Oak 

 (Plate 95). This tree, though hollow, and having its branches partly supported by iron 

 stays, is still healthy and vigorous. It measures about 60 feet in height by 30 feet 



5 inches in girth, and the spreading roots are about 18 paces round at the ground. 

 The spread of the branches is 30 yards in diameter. It is about three-quarters 

 of a mile from Edwinstowe, and is not far from another tree known as Simon 

 Foster's Oak, which is about 44 feet high and 25 feet in girth. 



At Welbeck, the seat of the Duke of Portland, in the same beautiful and well- 

 wooded district, known as the Dukeries, on heavier soil than that at Thoresby, 

 are a number of magnificent oaks which were described and figured in 1790 in 

 a scarce pamphlet by Major Rooke. Of these I saw the Porter Oaks, so called 

 because they stand opposite each other on each side of a gate in the park. When 

 measured by Rooke about 1779 they were as follows : No. i. 98 feet high, 23 feet 

 girth at 6 feet; contents, 840 feet. In October 1903, 25^ feet; the top having 

 been dead for many years it is now much less in height. No. 2. 88 feet high, 20 feet 

 girth at 6 feet ; contents, 744 feet. Now it is 23 feet and rapidly decaying. 



Another tree, called by Rooke the " Duke's Walking Stick," of which there is a 

 small figure in Loudon, p. 1766, was in 1779, iii feet 6 inches high, and 70 feet 



6 inches to the first branches ; at 6 feet it measured 1 2 feet in girth, and was esti- 

 mated to contain 440 cubic feet. A very celebrated oak at Welbeck is the Greendale 

 Oak, which has often been figured and described. In my copy of Strutt there is a 

 good plate of this tree, without number or description, bound at the end of the 

 volume. Tradition says that a bet was made by a former Duke of Portland, that 

 he had an oak so large, that a coach and four could be driven through its trunk, 

 and the hole having been cut, he won his bet. When measured by Rooke it was, 

 above the arch of the hole, 35 feet 3 inches in girth, the hole being 10 feet 3 inches 

 high and 6 feet wide. Even at that time Rooke's figure shows it to have been 

 a mutilated wreck, but the tree is still alive. 



Near the Greendale Oak there is a magnificent though dead specimen of burr 



