The Great British Trees were 50 trees selected by The Tree Council in 2002 to spotlight trees in the United Kingdom in honour of the Queen's Golden Jubilee.[1]
Ashbrittle Yew in Ashbrittle, Wellington, Somerset
Southern England
Wellingtonias were named in honour of the first Duke of Wellington, having been introduced to this country in 1853, a year after his death. The parent tree here was planted in 1857 by the second Duchess.
Brighton Pavilion Elm in Brighton, East Sussex
Queen Elizabeth Oak in Cowdray Park, Midhurst, West Sussex
Selborne Yew in Selborne, Hampshire
Wellington's Wellingtonia, a Giant Sequoia, in Stratfield Saye, Hampshire
Tolpuddle Martyrs Tree in Dorset
Big Belly Oak in Savernake Forest, Wiltshire
London and the Home Counties
Great Oak in Panshanger Park
The Cage Pollard in Burnham Beeches, Buckinghamshire
Ankerwycke Yew in Wraysbury, Berkshire
The World's End Black Poplar in Roydon, Essex
The Great Oak, Panshanger Park in Hertingfordbury, Hertfordshire
Sidney Oak in Penshurst Place, Kent
Sweet chestnut 'The Seven Sisters Chestnut' in Viceroy's Wood, Penshurst, Kent[2] NOTE this is not in the Tree Council’s original list.
Great London Plane of Ely, Britain's first London Plane in Ely, Cambridgeshire
Newton's Apple Tree in Woolsthorpe Manor, Grantham, Lincolnshire
Bowthorpe Oak in Bourne, Lincolnshire
Kett's Oak in Hethersett, Norfolk
Chedgrave Jubilee Oak in Norfolk
The Midlands
Morton Horse Chestnut in Derbyshire
Lebanon Cedar in Childrey, Oxfordshire
Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire
Original Bramley apple in Southwell, Nottinghamshire
Northern England
Holker Lime
The Appleton Thorn Tree in Appleton Thorn, Cheshire
Marton Oak in Marton, Cheshire
Borrowdale Yew in Cumbria
Levens Hall Yew in Levens Hall, Cumbria
Holker Lime in Holker Hall, Cumbria
Wild Cherry in Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal, near Ripon, North Yorkshire
Northern Ireland
Great Yew, a pair of yews now appearing to be a single tree, in Crom Castle, Fermanagh
Old Homer, Kilbroney Park, Rostrevor
Scotland
Capon Tree plaque
Granny Pine, a 300-year-old Scots Pine at Glen Affric, Highlands
Fortingall Yew, a 2,000-3,000-year-old yew in Perth and Kinross
Arbutus Tree, a tree likely grown from a seed collected in North America by surgeon-botanist Archibald Menzies in the late 1700s near Castle Menzies Gardens NOTE This is not in the Tree Council’s original list
Arbutus Tree
Parent Larch, a European Larch in the grounds of a Hilton hotel built by the Duke of Atholl in Dunkeld, Perth and Kinross
A Douglas-fir, in the grounds of Scone Palace where David Douglas was born, in Perth and Kinross
A silver fir, in Ardkinglas Woodland Garden, Argyll
Capon Tree, an oak in what used to be the Jedforest, Jedburgh, Borders
The Craigends Yew, a 600-year-old layering Taxus baccata in Houston, Renfrewshire NOTE This is not in the Tree Council’s original list.
Wales
Ley's Whitebeam, one of only 16 Sorbus leyana (a type of whitebeam) growing wild anywhere, in Merthyr Tydfil
Pontfadog Oak, with a girth of 12.9 metres (42 ft), the largest Sessile oak in Wales, in Pontfadog, Wrexham. The tree was blown over by the wind in 2013.
Llangernyw Yew, the oldest tree in Europe (Between 4,000 and 5,000 years old),[3] a yew in the churchyard of St Digain’s, Llangernyw, Conwy
Defynnog Yew, Powys, Wales. A tree once estimated at 5,000 years old with evidence now suggesting a maximum of 2,500. NOTE it was not in the original list.