SEQUOIA, NAME OF THE REDWOODS
SOME CONFUSION has arisen with respect to the common
names of the two living species of Redwoods. Even the scientific names
of the two species have been changed one or more times. This confusion
has come about because the Redwood which grows along the coast has been
called "Redwood," and the Redwood which grows in the mountains has been
called "Big Tree." Both species of trees are REDWOOD, the same as two
pines are both Pines, though one may be called Digger Pine and the other
may be known as Sugar Pine. The species are quite distinct in their
distribution, however, and it seems likely that the names COAST REDWOOD
and SIERRA REDWOOD would be less confusing; hence, these terms will be
employed when reference is made to these species of Redwood. Authority
and support for the use of these names may be found in Redwoods of the Past, by Dr.
Ralph W. Chaney, paleobotanist, of the University of California. In the
Journal of Forestry for November, 1935, in an article entitled "What Are
the Largest Trees in the World?" by Harry D. Tiemann, of the Forest
Products Laboratory, United States Forest Service, the Redwoods are
referred to in the following terms: In height the outstanding species of
living trees today are the redwoods (Sequoia gigantea and Sequoia
sempervirens) . . . . In basal diameters the Sierra Redwoods or Big
Trees are preëminent as a class." Previous to the appearance of both Dr.
Chaney's pamphlet and Mr. Tiemann's article, Professor Emanuel Fritz, of
the Department of Forestry of the University of California, used the
term "Sierra Redwood" in a radio broadcast, referring to Sequoia
gigantea.
Sequoia is the scientific, generic name which is
applied to both the Coast Redwood and the Sierra Redwood. The theory
which is generally accepted holds that the name "Sequoia" was given in
tribute to a notable red man who spelled his name "Sequo-yah." Sequo-yah
was an uneducated, non-English-speaking half-blood Cherokee Indian. He
felt that his people might rise much higher in the scale of civilization
if they could read and write, and he began a study of speech in order to
help them. After long and patient study, he began a search for the unity
of speech, and finally decided that "sound" was the key to the
construction of a language. He was able to distinguish vowels and
consonants in the spoken language of the Cherokee Indians, and in 1821
he completed an alphabet of eighty-six characters. With its help, a
Cherokee Indian child could learn to read and write his native language
in a very short time. It is said that shortly after the official
acceptance of the alphabet by the Cherokees, every member of the tribe
was able to read and write. A printing press was set up and the news of
the day was printed in Cherokee in two newspapers. Cherokee laws and the
Christian Gospels have also been printed in the Cherokee language.
Because Sequo-yah lived for a time in that part of
Oklahoma which was then known as Indian Territory, he is claimed by
Oklahoma as one of her distinguished citizens, and that state has placed
a statue of Sequo-yah in the Statuary Hall of the National Capitol in
Washington. Although each state of the Union is permitted to place the
statues of its two greatest citizens in this hall, Oklahoma is
represented by the statue of Sequo-yah alone.
Loyal Oklahomans are proud of the fact that the
largest and most famous trees of the world bear the name of their
state's most distinguished citizen.
A particular one of these trees has helped to
perpetuate the memory of another famous Indian, whose name is familiar
to New Englanders. On May 12, 1871, Ralph Waldo Emerson, then traveling
in California, selected, at the request of Galen Clark, a Sequoia
gigantea near Clark's ranch and wayside hotel, and named it "Samoset" in
memory of the first Indian ally of the historic Plymouth colony.
The genus name having been accepted as Sequoia, the
two species were next distinguished, the Redwood of the coast as Sequoia
sempervirens, the Redwood of the mountains as Sequoia gigantea. The
story of the naming of these species follows.
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COAST REDWOOD OF MUIR WOODS NATIONAL MONUMENT
Courtesy of Muir Woods National Monument
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Sequoia sempervirens (Coast Redwood)
The species of Sequoia which grows along the coast
has been variously named. The Spanish Californians called it "palo
colorado," which means "red tree." After Menzies first saw it in 1792,
it became known as Redwood, because of its beautifully colored pink or
reddish heart wood. It has been called "Sequoia," "Coast Redwood,"
"California Redwood," and "Redwood." Throughout this book it will be
referred to as Coast Redwood.
According to the California botanist, Dr. Jepson,
specimens of the Coast Redwood were carried to England by Menzies in
1795, where they remained undescribed until 1823. In that year Aylmer
Bourke Lambert, an English botanist, examined the specimens. Of all
genera of conifers known to botanists at that time, this Pacific Coast
tree was most like the genus Taxodium. (Taxodium is the generic name
given to trees belonging to the Redwood Family which are native to the
southeastern United States and to Mexico. These trees were known to
botanists and had been named prior to the discovery of the Coast
Redwood.) Lambert placed the new species in the genus Taxodium, and
since it was "evergreen," he gave it the name Taxodium sempervirens.
"Sempervirens" literally means "always living," and the marvelous
vitality and resistance of this tree, as well as the fact that it is
evergreen, make the name especially appropriate. Lambert gave this name
to the new species in order to differentiate it from the species
previously known as Taxodium distichum, or Bald Cypress, a deciduous
cone-bearing tree.
In 1847, Stephen Endlicher, a German botanist, made a
study of the conifers, and decided that the tree named by Lambert
represented a genus distinct from Taxodium. He gave it the genus name
Sequoia, but retained Lambert's species name. The species thus became
Sequoia sempervirens.
Sequoia gigantea (Sierra Redwood)
The species of Sequoia which grows in the Sierra
Nevada was first given the name "Mammoth Tree," by the English. It has
been variously known as "Sequoia," "Giant Sequoia," and "Big Tree." The
more recent name "Sierra Redwood" is more appropriate and less
confusing. Throughout this book, it will be referred to as Sierra
Redwood, the Redwood of the mountains.
Soon after the discovery of the Sierra Redwood of the
Calaveras Grove in 1852, specimens were taken to England by William
Lobb, an English botanical collector. His material was examined by John
Lindley, botanist, who created for it a new genus which he called
Wellingtonia, in honor of the Duke of Wellington, and a new species
name, gigantea. He published the name "Wellingtonia gigantea" in
1853.
The first to recognize the new conifer as a genuine
species of Sequoia was Joseph Decaisne, the French botanist, who
transferred it to that genus and published it as "Sequoia gigantea" in
1854. It has also been known as "Sequoia washingtoniana," and is still
so called by some members of the United States Forest Service. Outside
of the Forest Service, the greater number of botanists now accept the
name given by Decaisne"Sequoia gigantea." The species name,
gigantea, refers of course to the fact that these trees are of giant
proportions.
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