
Anne Frank's 150 year old Chestnut - Amsterdam

Sessile Oak
probably the thickest tree in the Netherlands (1)

(2)

(3)
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Key Contacts:
ATF seeks person to act as a link person to groups and ancient tree activity
in Holland.
Contact
us if you would like to know more.
Support - Anne Frank Tree
Timeline
Het Parool, Thursday 21 June 2007
Rescue on the way for Anne’s tree?
Is or isn’t the Anne Frank Tree doomed to die?
Tree experts disagree.
Patrick Meershoek
Green leaves and blossoms all over. For a tree that’s lethally ill the
chestnut in the garden of 188 Keizersgracht certainly looks very healthy.
Sylvio Mutal, who lives near the Anne Frank House, has a spectacular view
from his window of the ancient tree, about which Anne Frank wrote in her
diary on 13 May 1944: ‘our chestnut tree is in full bloom, from top to
bottom. It is full of leaves and much more beautiful than it was last year.’
As a consultant to Unesco, Mutal (73) used to develop plans for the
preservation of cultural heritage in Ethiopia, Peru, Mali and Curaçao. Now
he has set his sights on protecting the Anne Frank Tree in his own back
yard. In cooperation with alarmed local residents and tree experts Mutal
attempts to prevent the cutting permit that the Amsterdam Centre District
Council issued for the tree from actually being used.
The opponents to cutting disagree with the District Council’s conclusion
that ‘cutting is the only realistic option.’ They believe there are numerous
options to keep the tree alive for a longer period, or at least to keep it
standing. ‘The tree is old and decayed, that much is true. But the District
Council’s acts out of fear for liability claims in the event the tree
collapses and causes damage. But we say: use every possible option to save
this monumental tree.’
more
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News
Item
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Sylvio Mutal has written to us from Amsterdam, An excerpt is
as follows:-
'The Anne Frank Chestnut Tree is an old 150 year old in splendour in
the middle of Amsterdam. I live next to Anne Frank's hiding
place from where she was deported by Nazi Germany and killed.
The tree cannot be killed. The advice of a top expert on chestnut trees is
required.
Further information
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These pictures were kindly sent to us by Frans Vera. He says:
I hereby send you some pictures of what is said to be probably the thickest
tree in the Netherlands. It is a sessile oak. A sign next to the tree says
that it is probably the thickest tree in the Netherlands. The circumference
is about 7,60 meters and the height 25 meters. In 1776 the circumference was
4,60 meters.
The tree is estimated at an age between 450 and 500 years old.
You can vote this tree Dikke Boom "most impressive oak in Europe" on
Jeroen Paters web site |