Hangman's Elm, or simply "The Hanging Tree", is an English Elm located at the northwest corner in Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City.
It stood at 135 feet (41 m) tall when measured c. 2000,[1] and has a diameter of 67 inches (1.7 m).
[2] As a result, it is considered to be Manhattan's oldest,[4] outliving Peter Stuyvesant's pear tree at the northeast corner of 13th Street and Third Avenue, and the great Tulip poplar at Shorakapkok in Manhattan's Inwood neighborhood.
Recent extensive research into the park's history by both an archaeologist [5] and a historian [6] has shown that the tree was on a private farm until the land was bought by the city and added to Washington Square in 1827.
[7] She was hanged from a gallows in the city's potter's field, on the eastern side of Minetta Creek, about 500 feet (150 meters) from the elm; at that time, Minetta Creek ran in a shallow ravine between the potter's field and the farm where the elm stood.