Joseph Tubb (1805–1879) was a maltster from Oxfordshire, England who created the Poem Tree at Wittenham Clumps,[1] which died in the 1990s and finally collapsed in July 2012.[2][3]
Biography
editTubb lived at Lavender Cottage in Warborough, a village near the town of Dorchester. He wished to become a wood carver, but his father convinced him to become a maltster. He lived a country life as a bachelor.
Joseph Tubb opposed the enclosure of the commons and pulled down fences in rebellion against this. He spent a short time in the Oxford gaol.
Tubb's main legacy was to carve a poem on a large beech tree on the eastern side of Castle Hill at Wittenham Clumps.[4] He took a tent and a ladder to Castle Hill and spent the summers of 1844 and 1845 carving the letters of a 20-line poem. The poem demonstrates Joseph Tubb's passion for the Oxfordshire countryside. Discrepancies in wording between a written original and those on the tree are said to be because he carved from memory.
References
edit- ^ Joseph Tubb & the Poem Tree Archived 2008-05-17 at the Wayback Machine, Project Timescape
- ^ Sadness as Clumps poem tree falls Oxford Mail 4 August 2012
- ^ Poet pens farewell verse to famous tree by Ben Wilkinson Oxford Mail 14 Aug 2012
- ^ Poem Tree Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine, Northmoor Trust.