Many by now have probably seen Nathan Masters's recent blog post or read elsewhere about this lone palm tree standing today in front of the Memorial Coliseum in Exposition Park.

At approximately 180 years of age, it is almost certainly the oldest-known living thing in Los Angeles, and the stereoscopic photograph below from circa 1873* may just be the oldest-known image of said tree (the smaller palm on the left).

My attempt to reproduce the original camera image.

Wikimedia Commons, public domain.

The basic story of how the palm ended up in Exhibition Park is told on its commemorative plaque.



Photo by J Scott Shannon.

The fascinating details of the palm's earlier journey from a back yard on San Pedro Street to the Southern Pacific Arcade Depot in 1888 have been meticulously detailed here.



Taken c.1888, just prior to the move to the Arcade Depot...



...where it stood greeting travelers for the next quarter of a century.

Courtesy U.S.C. Digital Library/California Historical Society.

While the palm at Exposition Park may be the oldest documented Washingtonia filifera in Los Angeles, we shouldn't forget the oldest-known examples of W. robusta: the Longstreet Palms (below), the story of which I've told here many times. These Civil War-era veterans are at least 150 years old, and are therefore no less worthy of monument status than their cousin in Exposition Park.



Wikimedia Commons, public domain.

The Hammel Palm and the Longstreet Palms were each world famous in their day. Now that they have all arisen out of obscurity, I think it's wonderful that their historical importance is once again being acknowledged, and celebrated.