Vintage Domed Cedar Chest w/Hinged Lid Wood Tree House Redwood Highway California, USA

Measures: 6 1/2" Long x 2 3/4" Wide x 3 1/8" Tall

When you’re in northern California’s Redwood Country, you’re not only going to be surrounded with giant towering redwood trees and massive redwood trunks, but redwood themed roadside attractions, including a variety of homes and unique spaces built inside hollowed out redwood trunks, including The Chimney Tree, The Eternal Treehouse, the One Log House, and the World Famous Tree House.

Originally named The Fraternal Monarch and later the Quadruped Tree, the World Famous Treehouse was featured in Ripley’s Believe-It-Or-Not in 1933, claiming to be the tallest one-room house in the world.

It is built inside a 4,000 year old redwood tree that has been hollowed out into a 21×27 foot room with a 500 foot tall ceiling. Even though this enormous redwood tree was struck by a lightning thousands of years ago and had the opening expanded to create a single room home inside it’s base, the tree is still alive.

When visiting the World Famous Tree House, you enter through the attached Gift Shop that sells all sorts of souvenirs, nick-knacks, gifts and redwood items. From the door and register area you can actually see into the tree house, but if you want to go inside it costs $2.00/person or $5.00/family.

The family before us told us that once inside you can’t see anything more than you can peeking in from the gift shop, but we paid the $5.00 to enter anyway because Carter collects pressed pennies and inside the tree house, there is a collection of antique quarter-operated machines and pressed penny machines! Plus, we were already here and we wanted to go inside.

Standing inside the treehouse, you can still see the charcoal on inside the tree from the lightning strike and fire. With a single light bulb hanging near the opening to go inside, it was dark, musty, and a bit eerie feeling — and with all four of inside, it felt a bit cramped.