Each year on September 11th the world reflects on the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center that forever altered the course of history. The site of the attacks is now home to the 9/11 Memorial Museum, and the 9/11 Survivor tree, despite growing just beneath where the towers fell, stands tall in the Memorial Plaza.
The 9/11 Survivor Tree’s unlikely survival

The 9/11 Survivor tree in November 2001 – photo via Michael Browne
After a month of going through the rubble, rescue workers were surprised and delighted to find a callery pear tree still clinging to life. Amidst the death and destruction, it represented a glimmer of hope. Charred with just one branch still alive, the tree first planted in the 1970s was nearing its end.
It was quickly transferred to Arthur Ross Nursery in the Bronx to recover along with 6 other trees pulled from the rubble. The 6 other trees were planted in several locations in Manhattan, but the tree required much more intensive care to recover.
Years after the attacks, the callery pear was replanted in the World Trade Center Memorial Plaza in 2010, alongside rows of swamp oak trees. It was christened ‘The Survivor Tree’ and celebrated with a children’s poem titled “The Survivor Tree’s Testimony“, read here by Whoopi Goldberg.
The history of memorial trees and groves
The 911 Survivor Tree is far from the first memorial tree, even in the United States. Another famous Survivor Tree in Oklahoma was inaugurated in 1996 after the Oklahoma City bombing that killed more than 150 people.
Trees have a much longer history around the world as memorials for lives lost, but much of what we see today can be traced back just a few centuries. That story starts where most stories end – the graveyard.
As cities in Europe grew larger and larger, city planners were forced to move cemeteries into the outskirts of urban areas. Land was much more plentiful there, and they helped manage the danger of disease in high population areas.
However, few residents wanted to visit lines of tombstones so far from home, let alone be buried there and forgotten by their loved ones. Plus, the new cemeteries were not blessed by the Catholic Church.
To combat this, landscaping specialists were brought in to overhaul the image of these new rural cemeteries. Trees and grass were planted to make them more attractive to visitors and remind them of a simpler time as they mourned the deceased.

Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris was the world’s first garden cemetery – photo via Derek Young
The rise of garden cemeteries
The first successful ‘garden cemetery’ was Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. When it was opened in 1804, it offered a radically different experience than the cramped and spooky city cemeteries people were used to.

A war memorial in Abney Park Cemetery – photo via Amedeofelix
After a few years (and some high profile burials), Père Lachaise Cemetery’s green grass and carefully managed trees caught on. It has since been expanded five times, and currently serves as the final resting place for more than 1 million bodies. Countless more cremated remains are housed in the crematorium.
The cemetery remains well-known internationally today due to a few celebrity residents. It contains the tombs of Oscar Wilde, Frederic Chopin, and Jim Morrison among others.
The curious concept of garden cemeteries spread quickly throughout Europe and the United States. Mount Auburn Cemetery near Boston opened in 1831, and later inspired many more in the US and abroad, including London’s Abney Park Cemetery.
Eventually, cities grew to engulf these landscaped areas, and urban dwellers decided they liked the new green spaces but could do without all the dead bodies. This led to an explosion in city parks throughout the Western world in the second half of the 19th century.
Memorial groves around the world
While trees served merely as a backdrop for memorializing the dead in garden cemeteries, later movements imposed a much more direct relationship between trees and the dead.
One such movement was the German Heldenhain, or Heroes’ Grove, originally thought up by landscape architect Willy Lange in 1914. In a heroes’ grove, an oak tree is planted for each fallen soldier. Oak trees were chosen because they are strong and massive but grow slowly, imbuing an everlasting continuity to the memorial.

The Heldenhain or heroes grove in Eberswalde – photo via Sinuhe20
Perhaps the largest instance of individual trees standing in for lost lives is the Forest of the Martyrs near Jerusalem. In it, a tree was planted for each of the 6 million lives lost during the holocaust. In addition to the trees, the Forest of the Martyrs is home to many museums and memorial monuments dedicated to the many groups targeted.
A more recent example is the National Memorial Arboretum in the United Kingdom. Although it doesn’t feature a single tree for each service member lost, it does feature many trees and memorials for military campaigns around the world. Near each memorial, trees from the region they took place have been planted as a tribute to the fallen soldiers, volunteers, and civilians.

The Armed Forces Memorial at the National Memorial Arboretum – photo via NMAguide
Survivor trees as memorials
Like a memorial monument or plaque, memorial trees planted after a tragedy occurs are aimed at future generations. They are a way for those who lived through the event to ensure that it isn’t forgotten, but don’t serve as symbol of what they went through.
Survivor trees, on the other hand, are a powerful symbol for both those who lived through the tragedy and future generations to come. They symbolize not only survival, but also regrowth of a community.
The 9/11 Survivor Tree is without a doubt the most well known survivor tree in the world. Not long after it was planted at the newly created World Trade Center Memorial, its influence began to spread across the nation, and later, the world.

9/11 Survivor Tree seedling in New York – photo via The Daily Gazette
The 9/11 Survivor Tree Seedling program
In the years since the September 11th terrorist attacks, a number of other terrorist attacks and natural disasters have occurred all over the world. To spread the strength of New Yorkers following the worst terrorist attack in the history of the United States, each year 9/11 Survivor Tree seedlings are sent to three cities around the world.
The first group of recipients in 2013 included Boston, Massachusetts, which had just suffered a terrible attack at the Boston Marathon. In 2014 a tree was sent to Fort Hood, Texas in honor of the attacks that killed 13 service members and wounded many others.
The first international recipient of a 9/11 Survivor Tree Seedling was Madrid, in memory of the 2004 attacks on commuter trains that killed 193 people. The tree itself was planted at the Spanish embassy in Washington DC.
The first seedling to be planted abroad was given to France in 2016 in memory of the attacks on Paris and Nice. It can be found on the grounds of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Quai d’Orsay.
What was once a humble callery pear tree that thousands of office workers walked past every day without a second glance is now a worldwide symbol of resilience. Each year at the beginning of Summer it comes to life with thousands of white blossoms, reminding all of us that even in the worst of times life will go on.

The 9/11 Survivor Tree in full bloom – Photo via 9/11 Memorial Museum
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As always, feel free to drop a comment below. It’s always nice to hear from you
Further reading:
9/11 Memorial: The Survivor Tree
Survivor Trees and Memorial Groves
Reblogged this on Wild Voices.
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What a brilliant, inspiring and sensitive article! And, as always, well-researched. Thank you for this encouraging message.
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Thanks for the kind words, Sally!
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Lovely article, and what a beautiful tree! I’m so glad it survived to bloom and spread cheer!
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Anyone who who isn’t convinced that trees tell great stories need directing here – really enjoyed this. Interesting to read into the emergence of urban parks.
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Thanks for the kind words! I was also surprised by that little detail. I will say that the omission of corpses was a change for the better… Could you imagine!?
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Thank you for writing this, and mentioning the Survivor Tree in Oklahoma City. We have memorial trees here too, but not the same. I always wanted to grow cuttings of some of them for those who wanted copies. I always liked the idea of rooting cuttings from scraps the get pruned from the Survivor Trees too.
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I definitely will write about the Survivor Tree in Oklahoma City soon. That one has a much different story than this one, even if the end result is similar.
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They are all unique, of course.
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Trees hold so many symbolic messages for us – great post!
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Been missing your tree stories
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Thanks, Roos! I’ve had a busy year and haven’t had much time for writing, but I’ll get back to it in 2019! Consider it my New Year’s resolution!
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Bellissimo articolo. Grazie
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