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Crowds flock to the small Massachusetts town to say goodbye to the Rockefeller Christmas tree

WEST STOCKBRIDGE, Mass. – This year Rockefeller Center Christmas tree comes with a strong New England accent, and locals couldn’t be more excited.

The Norway spruce that will travel to New York City comes from West Stockbridge, Massachusetts. It was scheduled to break down Thursday and make the roughly 140-mile journey south, arriving in downtown Manhattan on Nov. 9.

Rockefeller Center Christmas tree

The tree will be illuminated during a live TV broadcast on December 4, with 50,000 multi-colored lights with a Swarovski star on them, and will remain on display until mid-January.

According to the “Today” show, the tree is being donated by the Albert family in West Stockbridge. Erik Pauze, Rockefeller Center’s head gardener, first saw the tree in 2020, he said.

Local residents flocked this week to the tree, which was planted 67 years ago in honor of the homeowner’s nieces. Several workers could be seen high up in the 11-ton tree, tying up the branches for a journey south.

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In this drone image, workers prepare a Norway spruce, this year’s Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, for harvest on Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2024, in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

AP Photo/Rodrique Ngowi


“Beautiful story”

It is the first Rockefeller Center Christmas tree to come from Massachusetts since 1959.

“We have a lot of people coming to town who are interested in this. So people are at the house taking pictures and are excited about it,” said Bernie Fallon, a resident of West Stockbridge, a town of 1,400 in western Massachusetts . “The talk in town, the local gossip and conversations are quite high.”

Peter Giles Thorne, another resident, called it a ‘beautiful story’.

“A tree from your hometown makes something good,” he said, chuckling.

Send for a Rockefeller tree

Among those who visited the Christmas tree were Michael and Tania Hardinger, tourists from Denmark. They flew to New York and drove to Massachusetts, a trip that took longer than expected after Michael Hardinger went the wrong way.

“We call it the scenic route. So it took six hours instead of 2.5 hours,” Michael Hardinger said. “But we found it and we found the tree. And we are very happy.”

Hardinger said the trip was inspired by their love of Christmas, with the family having two and sometimes three Christmas trees in their Copenhagen home. Both musicians return to Denmark to perform a few concerts before arriving back in New York to do some Christmas shopping and visit the tree again, this time at Rockefeller Center.

“We love Christmas and the Rockefeller tree is something we have to see every year,” Hardinger said. “It’s so beautiful and fantastic. So to see it here alive before it’s killed is exciting and so much fun.”

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