logo for print

Do you love connecting with Bay Area landscapes and critters? Become a Friend of Bay Nature. Send us some acorns today!


Trees of Golden Gate Park and San Francisco Book Review

Trees of Golden Gate Park and San Francisco Book Review "Atlas Cedar" Mimi Osborne

by Marilyn Smulyan — published July 01, 2001

After reading The Trees of Golden Gate Park and San Francisco, it's difficult to know which is more significant—that Golden Gate Park exists at all, or that in today's world of "political correctness," this totally man-made park, full of non-native trees and plants from around the world, remains one of the City's crown jewels. Trees is a collaborative effort of the Pacific Horticultural Foundation, Strybing Arboretum Society, Friends of Recreation and Parks, Friends of the Urban Forest, and the Tree Advisory Board. In addition to being a first-rate guidebook—with descriptions of 170 trees written over the course of 25 years by Elizabeth McClintock, and illustrations by nine artists—Trees offers an intriguing account of the Park's development and the transformation of 1,000 acres shifting sand dunes into one of the world's greatest urban parks. According to Landscape Architect Russell Beatty, the rationale for creating the park was to "promote moral order and a healthy, wealthy, crime-free democracy," in response to the hedonism of the Gold Rush. A significant portion of the sale of each book will be donated to the Elizabeth McClintock Fund for Park Trees. The Trees of Golden Gate Park and San Francisco, Elizabeth McClintock, edited and arranged by Richard G. Turner, Jr., Heyday Books/Clapperstick Institute, June 2001, $18.95.

This article appeared as part of our "Ear to the Ground" column covering local nature and news from the conservation community.


  Comments powered by Disqus

Top Stories

Amongst marshes, a salty past, A walk along the Hayward shoreline

Berkeleyans closer to selling backyard produce , Residents want local food sustainability

Solar spectacle on horizon, Sunday's partial solar eclipse first in 18 years

More Articles >