Beloved Sycamore Gap Tree Is Felled at Hadrian’s Wall in Britain

Beloved Sycamore Gap Tree Is Felled at Hadrian’s Wall in Britain

One of Britain’s most famous trees, a sycamore that stood in a dip in Hadrian’s Wall, was cut down this week in what the authorities described as “an act of vandalism.”

The authorities said they arrested a 16-year-old boy on Thursday and a man on Friday in connection with the case. The Northumbria Police said the unidentified man, described as being in his 60s, and the teenager were both helping officials in their investigation.

“The senseless destruction of what is undoubtedly a world-renowned landmark — and a local treasure — has quite rightly resulted in an outpour shock, horror and anger throughout the North East and further afield,” Detective Chief Inspector Rebecca Fenney-Menzies said on Friday. “I hope this second arrest demonstrates just how seriously we’re taking this situation, and our ongoing commitment to find those responsible and bring them to justice.”

The police have previously said that they believed that the beloved tree, known as the Sycamore Gap tree, “had “been deliberately felled.”

Inspector Fenney-Menzies said that the investigation remained in its early stages.

Voted Tree of the Year in 2016 in the Woodland Trust awards, the Sycamore Gap tree, located about 100 miles southeast of Edinburgh, was several hundred years old and was featured in the 1991 film “Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves,” starring Kevin Costner and Morgan Freeman.

Sophie Henderson, a landscape photographer from nearby County Durham, burst into tears when she saw the news about the tree on Thursday morning.

“It’s devastating,” she said in an interview from the place where the tree had stood, where journalists, police officers and others gathered on Thursday afternoon.

“I know a lot of people will say, ‘It’s just a tree,’ but it’s so much more,” she said. “It makes me so angry and upset that somebody would do such a thing to something that’s so special to so many people.”

The view, without the tree, looked strange and sad, she said. Just a few weeks ago, she photographed the tree with the northern lights behind it, she said.

On Friday, the Northumberland National Park Authority mourned the loss of the tree and said it would work with the National Trust and others “to consider opportunities and make plans for the site and the tree.”

“We are still coming to terms with loss of the tree at Sycamore Gap and we are deeply touched by all the messages and support we have received,” the authority said.

Jamie Driscoll, the mayor of the North of Tyne Combined Authority, said the tree was part of the soul of people in the north of England. When he visited the fallen tree on Thursday, he said he noticed that the cuts in the tree were perfect, and appeared to have been made using a heavy-duty chain saw that was at least 28 inches long.

“It requires an awful lot of premeditation to do something like that,” Mr. Driscoll said. “This is not just young, stupid drunk people keying someone’s car.”

The tree stood along a dip in Hadrian’s Wall, which was built by the Roman Army after the emperor Hadrian’s visit to Britain in A.D. 122. The wall, which spans 73 miles, was the frontier of the Roman Empire for nearly 300 years. More than one million people visit the wall each year, according to Northumberland National Park.

Ian Sproat, an electrician and amateur photographer who lives about 40 minutes by car from the tree, said that he was “gobsmacked” when he heard that the tree had been chopped down and thought it was a hoax. When he arrived at the spot where the tree had stood on Thursday morning and gathered with others, his anger turned to sadness, he said.

The tree was made famous globally by the Robin Hood movie, but for local people, he said, it was much more than that — it was a place for engagements, weddings or spreading ashes, or just somewhere to go for some peace and tranquillity. A woman near him, who said generations of her family had visited the tree, was sobbing, with her head in her hands, he said.

Mr. Sproat recalled the nights he spent drinking coffee by the tree, photographing it under a dark sky, to clear his head.

“Anyone who wants to get away, you disappear in Northumberland,” he said, “and this is generally where people end up.”

Christopher Mele contributed reporting.