Argyle Street ash tree
The Argyle Street Ash is a European ash tree on Argyle Street in Glasgow, Scotland.
History
The ash tree is situated outside Franklin Terrace on Argyle Street in the Finnieston district of Glasgow and is the only tree on the street. In his 1951 book From Glasgow's Treasure Chest James Cowan describes the tree as "straight as a ship's mast" and "quite the most graceful ash I have seen". Cowan records that the ash had been planted by accident in the 1850s when the residents of the adjacent recently-built tenement brought primrose roots back from a holiday to plant in the front garden and an ash seed was transplanted unknowingly. By the time of Cowan's writing the tree was already tall, higher than the tenement. He records how once a cat was trapped in the tree for two days before being rescued by the fire brigade. The height of the tree and lack of side branches is likely due to its shaded location. Cowan thought the tree could survive for another 75 years.The Argyle Street ash tree is protected by a tree preservation order, the first tree in Glasgow to receive one. It has been subject to removal of significant amounts of deadwood several times in the early 2020s. It has only been mildly affected by the Hymenoscyphus fraxineus fungus that has destroyed many ash trees across the UK, and retains more than 75% of its canopy. Its urban setting, where leaf litter is frequently swept away, and isolation may have helped its survival and avoidance of reinfection. The adjacent buildings provide heat and paved surfaces reduce humidity that may also have helped limit the impact of the disease.