American - Elm

The very thing that made the elm beloved—its ubiquity—became its downfall. In 1930, a shipment of logs from Europe arrived in Ohio carrying a stowaway: a fungus known as . The tragedy unfolded with clinical cruelty:

The story of the ( Ulmuscap U l m u s americanaa m e r i c a n a american elm

By the 1970s, tens of millions of elms had died, leaving "Elm Streets" across the country ironically empty of their namesake. The Survivors and the Return What Happened To American Elm? The very thing that made the elm beloved—its

: The fungus clogged the tree's vascular system, preventing water from reaching the leaves. Within years—sometimes months—the stately giants turned into skeletal gray husks. The Survivors and the Return What Happened To American Elm

) is one of monumental grace, a heartbreaking plague, and a quiet, scientific resurrection. The Cathedral of the Streets

For over a century, the American Elm was the definitive architect of the American town. Prized for its rapid growth and unique "vase" shape, it grew tall—often reaching 100 feet—before its limbs arched outward to meet its neighbor across the road. These "vast green tunnels" transformed ordinary avenues into living Gothic cathedrals, cooling cities by several degrees and offering a sense of permanence.