Students organized tree plantings in 1861; then in 1869, the faculty sent a proposal to the Board of Trustees recommending that the campus "represent in time the forest growth of the State, and if possible, the general botany of the region."
Over the next century, grounds supervisors and landscape architects populated the college's campus with exotic and indigenous flora of North Carolina's Piedmont region.
The letter was accompanied by a check from the estate of Edwin Latimer Douglass, one of whose life interests had been forestry.
The college applied funding from the Douglass estate to take aerial photos and draw up topographical maps.
Since then, students and college staff have contributed to the continuing project of labeling and caring for the trees on campus.