Rock River Trail Celebrating America’s 250th with Liberty Oak Sapling Giveaway
In 2026 we invite you to plant a Rock River Trail Liberty Oak tree to celebrate 250 years of the founding of our country.
When you plant a Liberty Oak sapling in 2026, you are not just celebrating 250 years, you are investing in the next 250. Planting these saplings will mark three moments in time — the founding of our nation, the present generation, and the generations still to come.
For the 16th year in a row, the Rock River Trail will distribute free oak and pecan saplings along the Rock River corridor in mid-April. Over these 16 years Chad Pregracke, president of Living Lands and Waters’ One Million Trees program, has graciously donated 167,000 trees to the Rock River Trail Initiative and our watershed
The goal of this project is to re-establish native, nut-bearing, hardwood trees along waterways to help reduce erosion, improve water & air quality, provide shelter and food for wildlife, and to improve biodiversity.
According to availability, each county will receive bur oak, red oak, swamp white oak, and pecan saplings. Each sapling is 1 to 2 feet long and bare-rooted. The trees will be distributed in Rock Island, Henry, Whiteside, Lee, Ogle and Winnebago counties in Illinois, and Rock, Dane, Jefferson and Fond du Lac counties in Wisconsin. Each county will have its own distribution method.
Trees should be planted near the Rock River or near the mouth of one of its tributaries. Trees are available for the public sector: city, county, state, parks, preserves and conservation areas, and for private individuals on farms, residences and businesses along the Rock River—all free of charge.
The Rock River Trail Initiative established a National Water Trail along the 320 miles of the Rock River, from its source above the Horicon Marsh in Wisconsin to its mouth at the Quad Cities in Illinois. This was achieved in March of 2013, when it was designated a National Water Trail by the National Park Service.
A BIG THANK YOU! Rock River Trail board member Steve Rypkema has coordinated this effort for the last several years. We are so appreciative of the work and miles he has put in delivering the trees to the eleven counties in Illinois and Wisconsin which border the Rock River.
DOWNLOAD OAK AND PECAN TREE INFO DOWNLOAD TREE PLANTING AND CARE INFODELIVERY CONTACTS AND LOCATIONS
In Rock Island County contact the Rock Island County Rock River Trail Council Member Dean Mathias, 309-737-8429.
For Henry County contact the Henry County Soil & Water Cons. District, 309-973-3377, 301 E North St., Cambridge, IL.
For Whiteside County contact Whiteside County Soil and Water Conservation District, USDA Bldg., 16255 Liberty St., Morrison, IL, 815-772-2124 (Ext.3).
For Lee County contact Dixon Park District; Ruth Edwards Nature Center, 815-288-5209.
For Ogle County contact City of Byron; Byron Forest Preserve District, Oregon Park District; Ogle County Solid Waste Management, Oregon, IL
For Winnebago County & Stateline Area Rockford Park District; Klehm Aboretum & Botanical Garden, Rockford; Nature At The Confluence, South Beloit,815-200-6910
For Rock County contact Rock County Land Conservation Department; USDA Service Center, 440 N. U.S. Highway 14, Janesville, WI, 608-754-6617 x117.
In Dane County Dane County Land and Water Resources Department, 608-224-3730
For Jefferson County contact Jefferson County Parks, Jefferson, WI, phone 920-674-7452
For Dodge County contact Dodge County Land Resources & Parks Dept., 127 E. Oak St., Juneau, WI, phone 920-210-6253.
For Fond du Lac County contact the City of Waupun, Waupun, WI, phone 920-324-7918.