No Partridge in a Pear Tree in Knoxville this Christmas

Pear Tree in Bloom, Kendrick Place, Knoxville (Photo by Gay Lyons)

Quite possibly the only pear tree in downtown Knoxville recently disappeared from the small green space between Kendrick Place and the Masonic Temple. After years of treatment for blight, it finally became so diseased that it had to be removed, though it didn’t go quietly or without fanfare. It turns out the tree had a bit of contentious and even literary history behind it.

Farewell to a Pear Tree, Kendrick Place, Knoxville, November 2012

Farewell to a Pear Tree, Kendrick Place, Knoxville, November 2012

While its blossoms splashed the spring time sky with vibrant color, in the fall its pears splashed the historic brick beneath it with slippery, messy, decayed fruit. Some residents of Kendrick Place wanted to cut it down a while back. The story, documented more fully here, with a follow-up here, was one of the first online articles I found about downtown living when Urban Woman and I struggled with our decision to move to the center city.

Farewell to a Pear Tree, Kendrick Place, Knoxville, November 2012

Judy Loest reads her poem, “Pears,” Farewell to a Pear Tree, Kendrick Place, Knoxville, November 2012

It appears that in 2009, at least one resident asked for the tree to be put on the agenda for the next homeowners meeting. Anticipating a request to cut the tree down, when the agenda item was called, Gay Lyons read the poem “Pears” by Judy Loest. Judy, a former resident of Kendrick Place had written the poem in response to a similar previous discussion. After hearing the beautiful tribute to the tree read aloud, the topic of its removal ceased to be an issue.

Farewell to a Pear Tree, Kendrick Place, Knoxville, November 2012

In subsequent years, the tree became beloved, but blighted. And so it was, that on a recent day in November, a small crowd gathered to say farewell to a semi-famous tree. Organized by Gay Lyons, the event featured Pear Bellinis for a final toast and a reading of the poem by author, downtown resident and friend of Kendrick Place, Judy Loest. Neighbors from Kendrick Place were joined by a number of downtown friends including Cynthia Moxley who published the stories noted above on her Blue Streak blog, Andie Ray former owner of Vagabondia and long-time downtown resident (now in Old North), Cynthia Markert, downtown artist, and others.

Farewell to a Pear Tree, Kendrick Place, Knoxville, November 2012

  • Pear Bellinis (Cocktail created by Gay Lyons):
    I can pears
    Poire (Mathilde Pear liqueur)
    Prosecco
    Rosemary sprigs
    Unpeeled pear slices
    Freeze pears and their liquid overnight. Let thaw. Smush pears in liquid until slushy. Add at least a cup of Poire to pear slush–to desired consistency and potency. Mix well. To serve, pour thawed pear slush into champagne flute about 1/3 way. Fill flute the rest of the way with prosecco. Garnish with a rosemary sprig and a pear slice.

The brief event was a fun way to say goodbye to a tree. No one cried or made a speech. There was laughter. New neighbors, Sonia and Allen, were introduced and other topics of downtown life interlaced conversation about the tree. The toast was made, the poem read and old friends shared a few moments together in the late autumn dappled sunlight.

But something more sat just beneath the surface for probably more than one of us. The fact that this improbable tree grew in an unlikely place and hung on tenaciously for as long as it did, stands as a testament to perseverance. Its life in the city and ultimate demise mirrors our own. It’s not a long leap from the departure of a tree to thoughts of our own final days. We live and love in this city and then, inevitably, we are gone. In the time we are given, will we add enough beauty to the city that we deserve to be remembered like the pear tree?

Pear Tree in Bloom, Kendrick Place, Knoxville (Photo by Gay Lyons)

 

Comments

  1. Judy Loest says:

    Thank you for documenting in such an eloquent way the loss of something so humble and miraculous as a tree. Thanks especially for your last sentence, something we must all ponder not only as citizens of a small community but as citizens of the Earth.

  2. Gay Lyons says:

    Thanks for this sweet tribute to the pear tree. It was a fun gathering of friends–Thanks to you and the Urban Woman for coming out to spend time with friends and neighbors.

  3. What a sweet post, Urban Guy. Thanks for the links to The Blue Streak. It was a poignant little gathering and I’m glad I was there. I don’t think that kind of thing would have happened in Sequoyah Hills, my old neighborhood. Downtown is such a special place.

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