Description: Print Specifics: Type of print: Wood engraving - Original antique printYear of printing: not indicated in the print - actual: 1882 Publisher: Leipzig, Heinrich Schmid & Carl Gunther Condition: 1 (1. Excellent - 2. Very good - 3. Good - 4. Fair)Dimensions: 10 x 13.5 inches (26 x 34 cm), including blank margins (borders) around the images.Paper weight: 2-3 (1. Thick - 2. Heavier - 3. Medium heavy - 4. Slightly heavier - 5. Thin)Reverse side: BlankNotes: Green color around the print in the photo is a contrasting background on which the print was photographed.Narrative: The grant of the Mariposa Grove covers four sections, or two miles square, and is under the charge of the Yosemite commissioners. The first that was known of the big trees was in the spring of 1852, when a hunter discovered what is now called the Calaveras Grove. He could get no one to believe his story, and had to resort to a trick to get any of his companions to go with him to the trees, so as to verify his statements. Once verified, descriptions were widely published, and, from San Francisco papers, copied into English prints. In 1853 an English botanist published a scientific description, and designated the tree as the Wellington gigantea. In 1854 an eminent French botanist, M. Decaisne, at a meeting of the "Societe Botanique de France," presented specimens of the big trees and redwood that he had received from the consular agent of France at San Francisco. He explained at length his reasons for considering the big tree and redwood as belonging to the same species, Sequoia, an affinity the English botanist had overlooked; so, in accordance with the rules of botanical nomenclature, the new species was called Sequoia gigantea. Professor Whitney, State Geologist of California (upon whose faithful work I have drawn liberally), says : "It is to the happy accident of the generic agreement of the big tree with the redwood that we owe it that we are not obliged to call the largest and most interesting tree of America after an English military hero. Had it been an English botanist of the highest eminence, the dose would not have been so unpalatable." (Sequoia, it will be remembered, was the name of the Cherokee Indian who, early in this century, invented an alphabet and written language for his tribe.) So far as is yet known, there are but eight distinct patches or groves of the big trees. They are very limited in range, and seem to belong exclusively to California. They form groves, largely intermixed with other trees, very little below five thousand and never over seven thousand feet above sea - level. They have been, without difficulty, largely propagated from the seed, and fine specimens are now growing in many parts of America and Europe. A few miles south of the Mariposa Grove, the Sequoias seem to find a more congenial home, and may be found of all ages and sizes, from the seedling up. A mill, at this place, saws them into lumber. Professor Whitney closes his very interesting chapter by saying: "The big tree is not that wonderfully exceptional thing which popular writers have almost always described it as being. It is not so restricted in its range as some other coniferae of California. It occurs in great abundance, of all ages and sizes, and there is no reason to suppose that it is now dying out, or that it belongs to a past geological era, any more than the redwood. Martin2001 Satisfaction Guaranteed Policy! Any print purchased from me may be returned for any (or no) reason for a full refund including all postage. Internet seller since 1998.Five-star service.
Price: 16.09 USD
Location: Manassas, Virginia
End Time: 2024-10-02T20:16:05.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.45 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Print Type: Woodcut & Block
Original/Reproduction: Original Print
Dimensions: 10 x 13" (25 x 33 cm)
Style: Vintage
Listed By: Martin2001
Date of Creation: 1883
Features: Not-framed
Color: B/W
Subject: American West
Print Surface: Paper
Type: Print