The Architect of the Capitol
  
HomeAbout UsCapitol ComplexCapitol Visitor CenterProjectsBusiness CenterEmployement
Capitol Complex
  YOU ARE HERE>> Architect of the Capitol/Capitol Complex/Grounds/Capitol Grounds Christmas Trees
 
January 30, 2009
AOC Logo
 
Capitol Grounds Christmas Trees
Print Version
 
The regular practice of displaying a Christmas tree on the Capitol grounds is relatively recent. Correspondence of 1919 in the records of the Architect of the Capitol indicates that a Christmas tree was purchased that year. However, it was not until 1964 that a definite procedure was initiated and a tree-lighting ceremony established.

In 1963, House Speaker John W. McCormack suggested to J. George Stewart, Architect of the Capitol, that a Christmas tree be placed on the Capitol grounds. A live 24-foot Douglas fir was purchased for $700 from Buddies Nurseries of Birdsboro, Pennsylvania, and was planted on the West Front lawn. Each year through 1967 this tree was decorated and a tree-lighting ceremony was held. Unfortunately, a combination of factors, including a severe wind storm in the spring of 1967 and root damage, caused the tree to die in 1968; it was removed in the same year. The 1968 Christmas tree was made from two white pines from Finxburg, Maryland, and was 30 feet tall; the 1969 tree was a 40-foot white pine from Westminster, Maryland.

The United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service has provided the trees since 1970. Information about individual trees is listed below.

 
 
 
Year Tree Height Source
1970 Norway Spruce 40 feet Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia
1971 Black Spruce 45 feet White Mountain National Forest, New Hampshire
1972 Balsam Fir 50 feet Tennessee National Forest, Pennsylvania
1973 White Spruce 51 feet Allegheny National Forest, Pennsylvania
1974 Fraser Fir 41 feet Pisgah National Forest, North Carolina
1975 Balsam Fir 41 feet Ottawa National Forest, Michigan
1976 Red Spruce 41 feet Monongahela National Forest, West Virginia
1977 White Spruce 52 feet Nemadji State Forest, Minnesota
1978 Norway Spruce 60 feet Savage River State Forest, Maryland
1979 White Spruce 52 feet Nicolet National Forest, Wisconsin
1980 White Spruce 48 feet Green Mountain National Forest, Vermont
1981 White Spruce 50 feet Hiawatha National Forest, Michigan
1982 Balsam Fir 50 feet Riley Bostwich Wildlife Management Area, Vermont
1983 White Spruce 52 feet Chequamegon National Forest, Wisconsin
1984 White Spruce 58 feet Superior National Forest, Minnesota
1985 White Spruce 56 feet Ottawa National Forest, Michigan
1986 Shasta Red Fir 54 feet Klamath National Forest, California
1987 Norway Spruce 60 feet Wayne-Hoosier National Forest, Ohio
1988 Balsam Fir 50 feet Manistee National Forest, Michigan
1989 Engelmann Spruce 60 feet Kootenai National Forest, Montana
1990 Engelmann Spruce 65 feet Routt National Forest, Colorado
1991 Blue Spruce (live) 60 feet Carson National Forest, New Mexico
1992 White Spruce 62 feet Chippewa National Forest, Minnesota
1993 White Fir 65 feet San Bernardino National Forest, California
1994 Balsam Fir 58 feet Green Mountain National Forest, Vermont
1995 Douglas Fir 60 feet Plumas National Forest, California
1996 Engelmann Spruce 75 feet Manti-LaSal National Forest, Utah
1997 Black Hills Spruce 63 feet Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota
1998 Fraser Fir 50 feet Pisgah National Forest, North Carolina
1999 White Spruce 60 feet Nicolet NF, Wisconsin
2000 Colorado Blue Spruce 65 feet Pike NF, Colorado
2001 White Spruce 72 feet Ottawa NF, Michigan
2002 Douglas Fir 70 feet Umpqua NF, Oregon
2003 Engelmann Spruce 70 feet Boise NF, Idaho
2004 Red Spruce 65 feet George Washington and Jefferson NF, Virginia
2005 Engelmann Spruce 65 feet Santa Fe NF, New Mexico
2006 Pacific Silver Fir 65 feet Olympic NF, Washington
2007 Balsam Fir 55 feet Green Mountain NF, Vermont
2008 Subalpine Fir 70 feet Bitterroot National Forest, Montana

 

Architect of the Capitol · Feedback Form