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A Letter to Medford's Mayor-Elect Lungo-Koehn

There is much that the City can do to adapt to climate change and to mitigate it. The one activity that can do both is to plant more street trees.

Dear Mayor-Elect Lungo-Koehn:

Congratulations on your victory! Your campaign was clearly built on great organization, a depth of support from your followers and a message that resonated. I spoke to you briefly on the phone during the campaign and was impressed that you were willing to make time for a call. Now the hard part starts, and I’d like to offer you some thoughts to consider as you start planning for your new term. 

I am concerned about our climate. There is much that the City can do to adapt to climate change and to mitigate it. The one activity that can do both is to plant more street trees. On the adaptation side, trees reduce the heat island affect and keep our city cooler as the planet warms. A full canopy of properly maintained trees (not one here and there) can buffer the winds that will accompany increasingly severe storms. Trees take up water, and their roots can help water to infiltrate into the ground, reducing the amount of flooding that the city experiences in these storms. Trees also take up carbon and contribute to the reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from the city. 

Trees have all sorts of other benefits as well. Viewing trees helps the sick to heal and reduces stress levels. Trees beautify our city. Trees reduce pollution levels in the air. They keep our houses and sidewalks cooler and more livable on hot days. Street trees even increase property values. 

But the previous administration did not put enough funding into the budget to even maintain the number of street trees we have. The number of street trees is steadily declining. There is a backlog of 300 stumps awaiting grinding out and replacement with trees, and nearly as many dead trees awaiting removal. What does it say about our city to have these eyesores greeting us at every turn? The DPW’s staffing levels are woefully inadequate to tackle this backlog. A contractor could be hired to grind out the stumps and plant new trees, or additional personnel hired to eliminate the backlog and better care for the trees we have.

TreesMedford, which I cochair, is an advocacy group with a full plate of activities and concerns. We are working to secure funding to plant more trees for Medford, with a successful $20,000 grant from DCR under our belt and an $84,000 proposal currently under consideration for CPA funding.  (While it is possible to get grants for planting trees if the City's budget for planting trees does not diminish, maintaining trees and grinding stumps is a tough sell.)  We are strategizing about how to get funding for a tree inventory so that Medford can evaluate the trees it has and develop a succession plan for trees as they age out. We are concerned that Medford contractors add mulch “volcanoes” to the base of street trees in a way that can damage the bark and cause the tree to girdle itself, prematurely spelling death to the trees that are Medford's investment and heritage. Better communication with contractor staff of the proper way to mulch trees is needed. We support a tree ordinance as the right way to ensure that Medford does not lose its character or the community benefits that trees provide. 

Thank you for taking the time to think about Medford trees. We are looking forward to working with you on these issues and hope to garner your support for them as you begin your term as Mayor. 

Sarah Gerould

TreesMedford Co-Chair

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History: Medford Trees through the Ages

Trees play a significant role in Medford’s past and present.

Author: Rebeca Bechdach | A special thank you Medford historian Dee Morris for providing the information and pictures below.

In considering the planting of new trees today, it is important to reflect on the relationship citizens of Medford have had with trees in the past. Previous efforts to preserve trees display their importance in the eyes of our forerunners, and the events surrounding trees makes them long-lasting reminders of our country’s beginnings. Below is a brief recount of various historical events relating to trees in Medford, leading up to the present day.

Reverend Charles Brooks, professor of Natural History at the University of the City of New York and co-author of an early history of the City of Medford in the 19th century, said that the citizens of Medford had “a commendable pride in everything that could be made to contribute to its beauty and prosperity, and in nothing has this been seen more strikingly than in their work in planting and caring for shade trees.”

Black Walnut on the Brook’s Estate.

Black Walnut on the Brook’s Estate.

Brooks himself had many trees on his estate, including the Black Walnut pictured to the right, planted in 1721 for the marriage of Samuel Brooks. The estate, located off Grove Street in West Medford, was deeded to the city in the mid-1920s as a park.  The photographs of the Brooks Estate below give us a view of the trees that existed in Brooks’ day.

Unfortunately, in 1926 sparks from a passing train started a grass fire that damaged the interior of the old, partly rotted black walnut. Although citizens pushed for the tree to be saved, the railroad fire--in addition to lightning and ice storms--battered the tree to the extent that it had to be cut down. Living shoots from a branch of the Black Walnut were saved with the intention of grafting them, and it was noted in a local publication that around a dozen people went to the site seeking information about the tree to record its history in writing. See more photos of the Brooks Estate trees below:

The Fountain House

The Fountain House

Not only have trees been appreciated and cared for in Medford’s recent history, they have also served as the backdrop for American history. One example took place at the Fountain House Tavern, constructed as early as 1725 and located on Salem street and its modern day intersection with Route 93. It was Medford’s first outdoor cafe, and the site of two large elms. George Washington supposedly tied his horse to one of these elms.

paul revere news.jpg

Trees also make an appearance in stories relating to Paul Revere. On April 19, 1775, P. C. Brooks heard about Paul Revere’s warning while standing under the edge of a hickory tree. Another Medford tree, the Usher Elm, was once located on High Street near the Paul Revere Restaurant. It is believed that Paul Revere rode under this tree, giving it historical meaning in addition to the natural beauty it offered citizens of Medford. The tree became a shrine of sorts for the city, leading to public outcry when it was announced that the tree would be cut down. In 1890 protesters attempted to save the tree, posting placards against the destruction of the tree on its trunk and all over the community. 

Frank W. Lovering wrote of the event, noting that the roots of the tree “hindered laying the rails for the first horse-car line to West Medford.” Lovering further wrote: “It must go, the highway commissioner said with determination, and as a resolution said, it went with ‘a suspicious secrecy’.”

In addition to advocating for existing trees, members of the community also contributed to the planting of trees and securing land for them. Turrell Tufts, a merchant, set out trees on Forest Street and left a $500 legacy for more plantings in 1842. 

Forest St. Trees

Forest St. Trees

fells mao.jpg

Additionally, the MIddlesex Fells were saved as a state reservation in 1894, largely due to advocacy from Elizur Wright, a conservationist. Public sentiment towards the Fells at the time is encompassed in the words of naturalist Wilson Flagg in 1881: “What we desire is to make the Middlesex Fells a grand Forest Sanctuary to which 50,000 people residing within a circumference of 6 miles around it may resort for pleasure, observation and study, for healthful exercise, and for rational and quiet amusement.” Fells Reservation map (right) and visitors to the Fells (below):

visitors to the fells.jpg

By the 1920’s cars had become widely available, altering the way we interacted with trees. The construction of roads and private garages meant that more trees had to be cut down.

Trees also became a nuisance for drivers in that their fallen branches obstructed roads. In the early days of automobiles in Medford, local news publications reported that severe wind had knocked over several 60 foot trees on High Street, stopping traffic for an hour. 

Tree on Allston St.

Tree on Allston St.

Soon after in the 1930’s came the Great Depression, a severe, world-wide economic disintegration that led to high unemployment rates in the U.S. As part of the New Deal, the Roosevelt administration created the CWA (Civil Works Administration), a short-lived job creation program. The new employment opportunities created by the CWA included forest jobs. Workers in these positions were paid to carry out logging, resulting in more trees being cut down than had been seen before in Medford. The conflict between the citizens who wanted to protect these trees and those that wanted to keep men employed is described in the article above on the left. On the right is a telegraph from citizens of Medford thanking President Roosevelt for the new employment opportunities.

Now in the present day, the struggle between preserving trees and urban development carries on. Medford community members continue to support the maintenance of trees with volunteer planting events and less conventional approaches, like patching up a tree on Allston Street with bricks.

On the other hand, trees that were not purposefully planted to accommodate man-made structures around them have to be cut or taken down. As an example, the trees pictured below on Frederick Avenue, Stearns Avenue, and Lawrence Road have had large portions cut away to avoid the obstruction of power lines. Looking to the future, it will be important to keep surroundings and space availability in mind when planting new trees, a concept referred to as “right tree, right place”.


Now that we have gone through a few bits of Medford tree history, let us look to the future. Just as Medford community members tried to balance their needs with the importance of maintaining trees, so should we work to preserve our natural spaces for generations to come. As Elizur Wright wrote in 1891, “Keeping up a fit proportion of forests to arable land is the prime condition of human health. If the trees go, men must decay. Whosoever works for the forests works for the happiness and permanence of our civilization. A tree may be an obstruction, but it is never useless. Now is the time to work if we are to be blessed and not cursed by the people of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The nation that neglects its forests is surely destined to ruin.”

About the Author: Rebeca is a Tufts University student majoring in psychology and environmental science, and a Mystic River Watershed Association intern.

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History: Gypsy Moths in Medford

Learn about the gypsy moth infestation which began in Medford in the early 1900’s.

House of Trouvelot, where the pest started.

House of Trouvelot, where the pest started.

Author: Lindsay Naber | Photos and information credited to local Medford Historian, Dee Morris.

The Gypsy Moth is a destructive and invasive species with a record of decimating hardwood trees in Medford. French professor Leopold Trouvelot brought this species to Medford in 1869, allegedly because he wanted to breed the North American moth with the Gypsy moth to create a hybrid for use in silk production. Trouvelot ignored warnings about the dangers of bringing the moth to America and did so anyway. 

Willow Tree on Fellsway West, showing female moths laying their eggs.

Willow Tree on Fellsway West, showing female moths laying their eggs.

While experimenting in Medford, Trouvelot lost some Gypsy caterpillars, which escaped into the woods. He informed city officials, but they ignored the concern at the time because the escaped caterpillars seemed harmless. This mistake resulted in a great monetary loss for the city, as twenty years later in 1989 Medford saw a huge Gypsy moth outbreak. The moths decimated the tree population and were a nuisance to the people. 

The moths spread quickly and citizens were so worried about the situation that they suggested burning down the Middlesex Fells Reservation as a precautionary measure.   

Individuals tried to control the moth populations by spraying Arsenic, removing eggs from infested trees by hand, and banding burlap around trees to stop caterpillars from progressing up the trunk. Despite their efforts, by 1922 every town and city in Massachusetts was infested with Gypsy Moths. 

Men would tediously hand-pick the moths and eggs from infested trees.

Men would tediously hand-pick the moths and eggs from infested trees.

Burlap banding around trees prevented the caterpillars from migrating to the tops of the trees.

Burlap banding around trees prevented the caterpillars from migrating to the tops of the trees.

Elizur Wright was a 19th century conservationist, mathematician, abolitionist, Medford resident, and one of the first champions of the Middlesex Fells Reservation. Throughout the 19th century, he witnessed the impact that increasing city density was having on the public land and water resources. During the Great Depression, many New Deal public works programs operated in Medford centered around logging efforts. The city faced contention between conservationists and logging workers who relied on cutting down trees to make their living.  Luckily, the Fells survived the public works projects during this time, but was not guaranteed the same protection in the future. 

Elizur Wright noticed this vulnerability, vitality and beauty of the Fells and became the visionary for a federally protected Reservation. Wright described the importance of the fells when he said,

“Keeping up a fit proportion of forests to arable land is the prime condition of human health. If trees go, men must decay. The nation that neglects its forests is surely destined to ruin.” 
— Elizur Wright

In his many attempts to protect the land, he purchased sections of the Fells and offered his land to the state, but the Massachusetts legislature did not pass any laws of protection. Wright passed away in 1985, shortly before the Middlesex fells reservation became recognized and protected by the government, but his legacy and the momentum he built to see the Fells become a reality are not forgotten.

Today, Gypsy Moths represent one of the largest threats to trees and forests in Massachusetts. In the 1950’s the state funded insecticide and DDT spraying, but it now relies on biological threats to kill the moths. In 1989, it was discovered that the Entomophaga maimaiga fungus kills the moths. This fungus is now employed to deal with particularly destructive Gypsy moth populations. 

December, 1933: Newspaper article describes the tension between tree activists and those employed by logging efforts.

December, 1933: Newspaper article describes the tension between tree activists and those employed by logging efforts.

About the Author: Lindsay Naber is a Tufts University Student majoring in Environmental Engineering, and an intern at the Mystic River Watershed Association.



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City of Medford awarded $20,000 grant for Trees

Read about our first big win! MTAG helps city receive $20k for trees.

MEDFORD: Mayor Stephanie M. Burke is pleased to announce that the City of Medford has been awarded $20,000 for the Medford Canopy Improvement Initiative. Grants were awarded to fourteen municipalities, amounts ranging from $2,000 to $20,000.

 “I’m grateful to the Medford Tree Advocacy Group (MTAG) for taking the initiative and applying for this grant. Increasing the tree canopy in our City will greatly assist us in reaching our sustainability goals,” said Mayor Stephanie M. Burke.

 This grant will allow Medford’s tree canopy to grow by 25% in 2019. The trees purchased from the grant will allow the City to plant new trees in places where the tree inventory is significantly lower. Additionally, the funds will contribute to numerous events including but not limited to community tree plantings, interactive events, and educational events.

 "From filtering the air we breathe and absorbing stormwater pollution, to mitigating the urban heat island effect, trees play a key role in protecting and restoring the Mystic River and watershed lands" said Erica Wood, Communications and Outreach Manager at the Mystic River Watershed Association. "We are excited to partner with the City of Medford to increase tree canopy and raise awareness of all ways trees benefit our community."

 "We are so happy to be a part of the successful effort to get more support for improving Medford's tree canopy. These trees will help to improve our lives in so many ways - providing shade, replenishing the spirit, reducing the heat island effect, calming traffic, sequestering carbon - a big win all around,” said the Medford Tree Advocacy Group.

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