President Donald Trump planted a new offspring on Tuesday to replace a tree of almost 200 years in the White House that gave him a “magagine” after his slogan “Make America Great Again”.
The historic “Jackson Magnolia” believed that he was planted by President Andrew Jackson in the nineteenth century, was cut for security reasons on Monday.
The tree had shaded the southern porch of the White House for most American administrations. But he had a leg in bad shape since a small plane landed on the grass of the South and crashed into her in 1994, killing the pilot.
The White House said in a publication on X that Trump had “planted a new Maganolia offspring in the White House, a direct descendant of the historic” Jackson Magnolia. “
The reporters were not giving access to the planting ceremony, but the White House published a video on social networks or Trump digging on the ground with a gold -plated shovel and posing with a gardener.

President Donald Trump and Dale Haney, superintendent of the White House land, participate in a commemorative ceremony for tree planting in the southern portico of the White House, on Tuesday 8, 2025, to replace Jackson Magnolia’s offspring. (Official Photo of the White House of Andrea Hanks)

President Donald Trump participates in a commemorative ceremony of tree planting in the southern porch of the White House, on Tuesday, April 8, 2025, to replace Jackson’s magnolia with a descendant offspring. (Official photo of the White House of Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trump and Dale Haney, superintendent of the White House land, participate in a commemorative ceremony for tree planting in the southern portico of the White House, on Tuesday 8, 2025, to replace Jackson Magnolia’s offspring. (Official Photo of the White House of Andrea Hanks)

President Donald Trump and Dale Haney, superintendent of the White House land, participate in a commemorative ceremony for tree planting in the southern portico of the White House, on Tuesday 8, 2025, to replace Jackson Magnolia’s offspring. (Official Photo of the White House of Andrea Hanks)

President Donald Trump and Dale Haney, superintendent of the White House land, participate in a commemorative ceremony for tree planting in the southern portico of the White House, on Tuesday 8, 2025, to replace Jackson Magnolia’s offspring. (Official Photo of the White House of Andrea Hanks)

President Donald Trump participates in a commemorative ceremony of tree planting in the southern porch of the White House, on Tuesday, April 8, 2025, to replace Jackson’s magnolia with a descendant offspring. (Official photo of the White House of Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trump participates in a commemorative ceremony of tree planting in the southern porch of the White House, on Tuesday, April 8, 2025, to replace Jackson’s magnolia with a descendant offspring. (Official photo of the White House of Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trump participates in a commemorative ceremony of tree planting in the southern porch of the White House, on Tuesday, April 8, 2025, to replace Jackson’s magnolia with a descendant offspring. (Official photo of the White House of Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trump participates in a commemorative ceremony of tree planting in the southern porch of the White House, on Tuesday, April 8, 2025, to replace Jackson’s magnolia with a descendant offspring. (Official photo of the White House of Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trump and Dale Haney, superintendent of the White House land, participate in a commemorative ceremony for tree planting in the southern portico of the White House, on Tuesday 8, 2025, to replace Jackson Magnolia’s offspring. (Official Photo of the White House of Andrea Hanks)

President Donald Trump participates in a commemorative ceremony of tree planting in the southern porch of the White House, on Tuesday, April 8, 2025, to replace Jackson’s magnolia with a descendant offspring. (Official photo of the White House of Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trump and Dale Haney, superintendent of the White House land, participate in a commemorative ceremony for tree planting in the southern portico of the White House, on Tuesday 8, 2025, to replace Jackson Magnolia’s offspring. (Official Photo of the White House of Andrea Hanks)
The new 12 -year -old firing descends from the original tree that, according to tradition, Jackson planted to honor his wife, who died just before his oath in 1829.
The old tree was supposedly a sprout brought from his house in Tennessee.
The tree was the oldest in the lands of the White House, according to the National Parks Service, which indicates that from the 1870s, most presidents are planting their own commemorative trees.
“The bad news is that everything must come to an end,” Trump wrote on his social platform of truth in March when he announced that the tree would have to be cut.
He said that the Magnolia “in terrible conditions, a very dangerous security danger, at the entrance of the White House, nothing less, and now must be removed.”
Trump added that part of his wood would be preserved “and can be used for other high and noble purposes.”
A report from the arbolista said the tree could cause damage due to a “risk of structural failure.”
The White House Gardens have already arrived at the headlines this year when Trump said he was planning to pave the grass of the famous Rosas Garden, to give the feeling of his Mar-A-Lago farm in Florida.
The AFP contributed to this article.