There’s a delightful children’s book about a young man who lived in a hollow tree. The idea has captured the imaginations of readers but did you know that it has actually been done? And by some of the earliest European settlers of West Virginia, no less.
Over 250 years ago and a decade before the American Revolution, brothers and British army deserters of the French and Indian War John and Samuel Pringle escaped from Fort Pitt and lived in hiding for more than two years (from 1764-1767) in a massive, hollow sycamore tree.
The remarkable, gnarled sycamore tree that you can view today in Pringle Tree Park along the Buckhannon River in Upshur County is, at its roots, the same tree that the Pringle Brothers took residence in over 250 years ago.
While the aboveground portion of the original tree was destroyed once by disease and once by flood, this third-generation Pringle Sycamore is remarkably similar to its grandparent, including its hollowed trunk.
So fascinating, as is the fact that renowned Confederate General "Stonewall" Jackson's great grandfather was part of the original group that settled West Virginia alongside John and Samuel Pringle.