The open Kansas prairie was often found intimidating and foreign to settlers moving west because the landscape they left home had trees to provide wood for cooking and fuel for cooking and fuel for warmth during long winters. When the settlers spotted a cottonwood tree memories of home and shade came back and they had the confidence to move on. Later settlers staking out a new life on the Kansas prairie routinely planted the fast growing cottonwood to provide the shade, warmth and cooking fuel they had left in the east. Because of the part played by the tree in the early days of settlement, the cottonwood has been called the pioneer tree of Kansas.Then because of the House Bill No. 113, introduced by State Representative Relihan, started the official process that led to the cottonwood being adopted as the official state tree of Kansas by an act of the Kansas Legislature, approved on March 23, 1937.
Because it was the only tree!
Yes, the Eastern Cottonwood is the state tree of Kansas.
The cottonwood was adopted as the official state tree of Kansas by an act of the Kansas Legislature, approved on March 23, 1937.
The Cottonwood
the porcupine
The sunflower was chosen as the state flower of Kansas because it is a uniting symbol. It is a symbol that can be copied by children and adults alike. It also speaks of the earlier frontier days in Kansas.
The western hemlock was chosen to be Washinton's state tree in 1947.
It was chosen in 1945.
Kansas, Nebraska, and Wyoming all have some species of the cottonwood as their state tree.
Kansas's state Tree is the Cotton Wood. Kansas officials adopted this tree on March 23, 1937. Also a fun fact about Cotton Wood trees is many early pioneers planted Cotton Woods trees in Kansas so that's how they got there.
No, there are many types of trees in the great state of Kansas.
The blue spruce (Pinaceae Picea pungens) was chosen by the Utah State Legislature in 1933 to be the State Tree.
it was common