EAST GREENBUSH, N.Y. (AP) — The towering Christmas tree that will light up Rockefeller Center this holiday season is on its way to New York City. The 75-foot-tall (23-meter-tall), 11-ton Norway spruce was felled Thursday morning in East Greenbush, an Albany suburb located about 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of Manhattan. The tree was then loaded onto a 100-foot-long (31-meter-long) trailer as scores of people turned out for the occasion. It is expected to arrive at 30 Rockefeller Plaza on Saturday, where it will take its place in front of the midtown Art Deco skyscraper overlooking the plaza’s famous ice skating rink. The tree will be wrapped with more than 50,000 multicolored, energy-efficient LED lights and crowned with a Swarovski star weighing 900 pounds. It will be lit on Dec. 3 during a live TV broadcast hosted by country music star Reba McEntire. It will be displayed until mid-January, after which it will be milled into lumber for use by the affordable housing nonprofit Habitat for Humanity. The tree was donated by homeowner Judy Russ and her family, who noted that it was planted by her husband’s great-grandparents in the 1920s. “For this to now become the center of New York City Christmas is incredible,” Russ told the radio station 1010 WINS. The first Rockefeller Center Christmas tree was put up by workers in 1931 to raise spirits during the Great Depression, and the tradition has continued ever since.
Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Takes Its Journey to NYC
The iconic Christmas tree for Rockefeller Center, a towering Norway spruce, is en route to New York City from East Greenbush, NY, set to brighten the holiday season near the famous ice skating rink.
In a delightful tradition, the 75-foot tall Norway spruce, weighing 11 tons, has been cut down and is on its way to Rockefeller Center. The tree, decorated with over 50,000 LED lights, will be lit during a live broadcast on December 3rd. Donated by Judy Russ, whose family planted it nearly a century ago, the tree will eventually be repurposed into lumber for Habitat for Humanity after the holiday season.

















