Our purpose: to inventory, landmark, and promote the stewardship of cypress trees in Louisiana that are over 200 years old--alive at the time of the Louisiana Purchase.

Who we are

What is the Louisiana Purchase Cypress Legacy (LPCL)?

This is a volunteer campaign to identify and landmark cypress trees (the Louisiana State tree) that are at least 200 years old--alive at the time of the Louisiana Purchase.

We all have marveled at the huge old live oaks gracing many of Louisiana's parks, highways, residences, bayous, and byways. But did you know that the Louisiana State tree -the bald cypress- is in many cases at least as aged as our oldest live oaks and easily equals them for their grandeur and stateliness?

The conventional wisdom is that virtually all the old growth cypress-tupelo has long been logged off. But in truth, while most of it is gone, a surprising number of large old cypress still can be found in all corners of our state, from Goat Island in the West Pearl River, to Lake Fausse Pointe and Bear Bayou in the Atchafalaya Basin, to Saline Bayou in central Louisiana, to Black Bayou swamp in Tangipahoa Parish, to Coochie Brake southwest of Winnfield. In fact the largest bald cypress in the United States is located in Louisiana on Cat Island (now part of the Cat Island National Wildlife Refuge)-- it measures 53 feet in circumference at breast height. The very durability and sturdiness that made cypress the wood of choice for the building of New Orleans and towns all over Louisiana has helped the surviving old giants endure through the centuries.

With the celebration of the Louisiana Purchase Bicentennial, we have an ideal opportunity to link the cultural and historic heritage of our state with its ecological inheritance. The intent of the Louisiana Purchase Cypress Legacy is to commemorate the state's natural heritage by identifying and landmarking trees (with an emphasis on the bald cypress and tupelo) that are at least 200 years old, alive at the time of the Louisiana Purchase.

LPCL Objectives

Where are the "Louisiana Purchase Trees"?

In all corners of our state. Initial candidate sites include:

  1. 1664 Robert Street at Baronne, Uptown New Orleans , Orleans Parish **FOUNDER'S TREE** (plaque)
  2. Sargent Lake Vicinity, Catahoula Parish **FOUNDER'S TREE** (plaque)
  3. Cat Island National Wildlife Refuge, **FOUNDER'S TREE** (plaque)
  4. Tickfaw State Park vicinity , Livingston Parish
  5. Jean Lafitte National Park, Jefferson Parish
  6. Saline Bayou, Big Cypress Preserve, Bienville Parish
  7. Black Bayou Area, Joyce Wildlife Management Area, Tangipahoa Parish
  8. (a) Ernest Slough (b) Goat/Porter's Island, West Pearl River area, St. Tammany Parish
  9. Bear Bayou area, Atchafalaya Basin, St. Martin Parish
  10. Bayou Boeuf, Kisatchie National Forest, Rapides Parish
  11. Bayou Loutre-Phillips Lake, Union Parish

How big are qualifying (200+ year old) trees?

Size of trees depends greatly on location, access to nutrients, and other ecological variables. Depending on these variables, cypress trees twelve feet or greater in circumference at breast height are potentially good candidates as "Louisiana Purchase Trees".

What are the key components of the LPCL campaign?

How can the public and community groups assist in this effort?

Despite the public veneration for the old growth found in Sequoia, Redwood and Olympia National Parks in the Western United States, old growth cypress-tupelo in the Southeast has largely gone unnoticed. And it's only been in the last fifteen years that the US Forest Service has officially recognized old growth forests as a distinct ecological and biodiversity resource, a recognition that greatly enhances their status in forest management planning. This positive development lends support for the Cypress Legacy initiative; in addition the Legacy's timeliness is re-enforced by the State's effort to obtain massive Federal funding for its Coast 2050 Coastal Restoration Plan, as well as by ongoing threats to old growth habitats-in particular sedimentation, salt water intrusion, and cypress logging in the Maurepas Basin and other areas for mulch.