According to the legend that is told, George Washington had cut down a cherry tree when he was a young boy. The legend further went to say that he told his father what he did because he wasn't able to tell a lie.
Depends on the tree, and why it was cut down. Some of my family are tree farmers- they plant and grow pine trees, When grown these are cut and sent to a lumber company to be made into lumber to build houses. Smaller ones may go to a paper mill to be made into paper. Some of the trees at my place may be damaged or dying, and are cut down and cut into firewood.
Yes, it takes a long time for a tree to grow. Whole forests have been cut down through the centuries.
The mouse was killed by the cat.
Many animals can die out when trees are cut down. The animals food and shelter are lost when we take the tree's wood for ourselves. In the rainforest you can imagine how many beautiful, harmless animals can lose their lives when the tree itself is lost.
It depends where in the world but a few examples would be monkeys/ leopards, anything that lives in a tree or around a tree because of the food chain :)
A cherry tree It is a story. He did not really cut down a tree.
no
George Wahington cut his father's cherry tree down. When he was asked about it, he told the truth.
Washington didn't cut down a cherry tree. This is a folk tale that has been taken as history and was written by a Parson Weems as truth in his book a 100 years after the death of Washington.
He cut down a cherry tree.
George Washington
George Washington
If there are more of its kind then no. It is dead though.
no he got no fameily :c
No he didn't because the story is about George Washington and how he chopped the cherry tree not Abraham Lincoln cutting down an apple tree.
The story about George Washington cutting down his father's cherry tree, and then being unable to lie about it, has persisted throughout history. However, there is no evidence that this ever happened, and researchers have not been able to find any.
No- the cherry tree was a fabrication, but perhaps it did capture a true aspect of Washington's character.