Tree of the Week

Tuliptree: A Flower bed in the Sky

By Arbor Day Foundation | March 28, 2017
tuliptree

Liriodendron tulipifera

John Tradescant was a gardener to the King of England when he first brought a tuliptree back with him from North America. This foreign tree attracted attention from the locals for its tulip shaped leaves and fast growing height.

The tuliptree is distinguished in many ways—from its beautiful late spring flower show and its almost equally vibrant fall colors, to its place in history and its considerable industrial value. This tree is the tallest of North American hardwoods, growing to 100 feet or more and used in making furniture, cabinetry, musical instruments, and wood veneer. In the early history of the United States, giants 200 feet tall or more were commonly found. Despite its stature, the tuliptree is perhaps most known and loved for its large, yellow and orange, tulip-shaped flowers, which bloom in May and early June. Seen from above, from a hilltop or upper story balcony, these flowers are especially stunning.

But this large tree, which is pyramidal when young and oval at maturity, maintains its beauty throughout the year. Summer leaves are shimmering green, fall foliage is bright gold, and wildlife—attracting fruit remains on the tree long into the winter. The natural range of this hardy, long-lived tree is throughout the East, from southern New England, and Michigan, southward between the coast and the Mississippi River to Louisiana and the northern half of Florida. Tuliptree makes an attractive addition to home landscapes and parks when enough space is available for so grand a tree. (Grows in hardiness zones 4 to 9.)

Read last week’s Tree of the week here!

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  • Robert Channell June 17, 2019 at 5:11 pm

    I have a tulip tree that grows several feet in a year. If it wasn’t for the top 10 to 15 feet constantly breaking off during a summer time Gail I can’t imagine how big it would really be. The prior owner of my property planted it too close to the house. I don’t know what I should do with this tree is too big and I don’t have the money to have it transplanted but I hate to cut it down. I have only ever seen one other tulip tree in my 50 years of living in New England and growing up in the woods. Why is it that we don’t see more of these trees in New England and do you think that I could get a tree to grow from a cutting if done properly?

    • Sheereen Othman August 27, 2019 at 4:39 pm

      Hi Robert,

      That’s a tough situation to be in, all the more reason the right tree in the right place is so critical, so that we don’t have to remove beautiful, mature trees. Some have been able to grow tuliptrees from cuttings, it couldn’t hurt to try. Best of luck!