Guide to the Tree Circus Collection (Unprocessed)

Overview +

DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Collection Number

L96.21

Creator

???

Extent

Number of Containers:  Three (3) Boxes
Linear Feet:  1.5 Linear Feet

Repository

Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History, Archives
705 Front Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Abstract

This collection consists of photographs, diaries, notebooks, tree segments, and trade tools.

Location

The Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History, Santa Cruz, CA

Preferred Citation

The Tree Circus Collection, The Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History, Santa Cruz, CA

Publication Rights

All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the head of Archives at MAH.  Researchers may be responsible for obtaining copyright permission to use material not produced by museum personnel.

Process By

???

Date Completed

???

History Notes +

Axel Erlandson (1884-1964) was born in Sweden, immigrating with his parents to America in 1886. In the 1920s, he began experimenting with the training of tree trunks to grow in ornamental shapes and patterns. Axel’s wife, Leona, and daughter, Wilma, spent a vacation in Santa Cruz in 1945, visiting the Mystery Spot. After they returned home and told him about the successful tourist attraction, he purchased land that same year in Scotts Valley. He dug up his trees, moved them from Turlock, and transplanted them at the new site on Scotts Valley Drive. He also began training new trees, and in 1947 the site, later called “The Tree Circus,” opened to the public. Despite national publicity, the attraction did not draw many visitors. Erlandson sold the property in 1963, a year before his death. Subsequent owners were not successful, and the trees were neglected. In 1983 Michael Bonfante, a businessman from Gilroy, purchased the trees. In 1985 the trees made the fifty-mile trip to their new home in Gilroy to become one of the featured attractions at the Bonfante Gardens Theme Park. This collection represents Axel Erlandson’s personal work on the training of trees and the creation The Tree Circus road side attraction.