Friday, April 28, 2006

Today, April 28th, is Arbor Day...

The first Arbor Day took place on April 10, 1872 in Nebraska. It was the brainchild of Julius Sterling Morton (1832-1902), a Nebraska journalist and politician. Throughout his long and productive career, Morton worked to improve agricultural techniques in Nebraska and throughout the United States when he served as President Grover Cleveland's Secretary of Agriculture. But his most important legacy is Arbor Day.

Morton felt that Nebraska's landscape and economy would benefit from the wide-scale planting of trees. He set an example himself planting orchards, shade trees and wind breaks on his own farm and he urged his neighbors to follow suit. Morton's real opportunity, though, arrived when he became a member of Nebraska's state board of agriculture. He proposed that a special day be set aside dedicated to tree planting and increasing awareness of the importance of trees. Nebraska's first Arbor Day was an amazing success. More than one million trees were planted. A second Arbor Day took place in 1884 and the young state made it an annual legal holiday in 1885, using April 22nd to coincide with Morton's birthday.

In the years following that first Arbor Day, Morton's idea spread beyond Nebraska with Kansas, Tennessee, Minnesota and Ohio all proclaiming their own Arbor Days. Today all 50 states celebrate Arbor Day although the dates may vary in keeping with the local climate. At the federal level, in 1970, President Richard Nixon proclaimed the last Friday in April as National Arbor Day. Arbor Day is also now celebrated in other countries including Australia.

My husband is from Nebraska and grew up a few miles from Morton's home town of Nebraska City. He can remember celebrating Arbor Day before it became a National holiday. (He is much older than I ;-) Even I have visited Morton's home which is now a state park, the Arbor Lodge State Historical Park and Arboretum.

Here are some great crafts and activities to celebrate Arbor Day:
By the way, did you know that "arbor" means "tree" in latin. (Who says that this is not an educational site...)

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