Northern white cedar is an aromatic tree that can withstand cold conditions. Oil from the leaves is used in perfumes and in medicine, and the leaves are rich in vitamin C. In fact, one of the other names for northern white cedar, arborvitae, is Latin for “tree of life.” This honorific was given to the tree in 1536 when members of the Huron tribe showed a French captain how to stop his crew from dying of scurvy by using the tree.
Northern white cedar is Threatened in Maryland, Connecticut, Kentucky, and Illinois, Endangered in Indiana, Massachusetts, and New Jersey, and of Special Concern in Tennessee.
Hardiness:
-50 - 10 F
Ethnobotanical Uses:
Oil from this tree is used in cleansers, disinfectants, hair preparations, insecticides, liniments, room sprays, and soaps. Ojibwa made a soup from the inner bark of young twigs.
Medicinal / Pharmaceutical:
Twigs used by some to make a tea to relieve constipation and headaches. Vitamin C rich foliage was used by some Native Americans and early European explorers to treat scurvy.