Skip to content

Liberty Tree Traditional Cache

Hidden : 1/11/2019
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


This cache is surrounded by a beautiful stand of huge Live Oak trees that are very common in the South Carolina Lowcountry.  This is a fitting place for a cache titled  "Liberty Tree,"

The Liberty Tree was a famous elm in Boston which served as a rallying point in pre-revoluntionary days. On August 14, 1765, the Sons of Liberty gathered under the tree to protest the Stamp Act. They finished their protest by hanging two tax collectors in effigy from the tree. Soon there were "Liberty Trees" in most towns across America.

A loyalist named Job Williams cut the tree down and used it for firewood in August, 1775. This act enraged colonists across the land, and flags with representations of the Liberty Tree began to be flown.  Charleston also had its own Liberty Tree which is described below.

Charleston's Liberty Tree, Christopher Gadsden and the Sons of Liberty

 
 
Site of the Liberty Tree, 80 Alexander St.In 1766, the pot of liberty was being stirred by many of the colonists who sought to be free of the imposing hand of England. Many of these early "pot stirrings" took place underneath, or near, a Liberty Tree. Like the Boston Liberty Tree, similar meeting places rose in each of the thirteen colonies. In Charleston, Christopher Gadsden, a wealthy merchant, possessed the ability to stir the common man with his words. He met with like-minded revolutionaries, who became known as the Sons of Liberty, underneath a large oak tree in a Mr. Mazyck's cow pasture and there they shared a dream and rallied together.
 
      Ten years later, the people of Charleston first heard the words of the Declaration of Independence read under the branches of this Liberty Tree.

 



 
   When the British occupied Charleston in 1780, they chopped down the Liberty Tree lest it become a rallying point for the colonists. Then, in an act that could only have been motivated by vengeance, they burned the stump that was left.
 
      But that is not the end of the story of the Liberty Tree! After the Revolution, the root of the Liberty Tree was salvaged and was made into cane heads. One of these canes was given to Thomas Jefferson. 
 
      The root of liberty is strong......and once freedom has been tasted no weapon or fire or act of vengeance can quell that longing.
 
http://charlestonpast.blogspot.com/2012/06/charlestons-liberty-tree-christopher.html
 

The cache is a 6 x 6 lock and lock, hidden in typical geocaching fashion,  By using your geosense you should be able to find this easily.  Be sure to sit down and enjoy the view of the oak trees. 

 

Additional Hints (No hints available.)