- The Rockefeller tree has been put up every season around Christmas since the 1930s.
- Each year, a tree is selected and driven across state lines to Manhattan's Rockefeller Center.
- The iconic tree has come from Canada, New York, and various states across the Northeast.
Few holiday traditions are as enduring — or as photographed — as the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree.
Since the 1930s, a towering tree has appeared in Midtown Manhattan each winter, drawing crowds from around the world and signaling the unofficial start of the holiday season.
But long before it's lit in front of millions, each Rockefeller tree begins its journey elsewhere, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles to reach its famous perch above Rockefeller Center's skating rink.
Practically every tree since the tradition's inception has been a Norway spruce, though there have been a couple of white spruces and balsam firs over the years.
The tree is selected from candidates across the country, either through people submitting photos of their own trees or through the Rockefeller Center head gardener scouting potential picks in person.
Here's where the Rockefeller tree has come from over the past 100 years — see if your hometown has ever supplied the iconic tree.
1930s: Babylon, New York
1940s: Long Island, New York
1950s: Belvidere, New Jersey
1960s: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
1970s: East Montpelier, Vermont
1980: Mahwah, New Jersey
1981: West Danville, Vermont
1982: Mahwah, New Jersey
1983: Valley Cottage, New York
1984: Far Hills, New Jersey
1985: Harveyville, Pennsylvania
1986: Nanuet, New York
1987: Suffern, New York
1988: Raritan Township, New Jersey
1989: Montebello, New York
1990: West Norwalk, Connecticut
1991: Suffern, New York
1992: Stony Point, New York
1993: Nanuet, New York
1994: Ridgefield, Connecticut
1995: Mendham Borough, New Jersey
1996: Armonk, New York
1997: Stony Point, New York
1998: Richfield, Ohio
1999: Killingworth, Connecticut
2000: Buchanan, New York
2001: Wayne, New Jersey
2002: Bloomsbury, New Jersey
2003: Manchester, Connecticut
2004: Suffern, New York
2005: Wayne, New Jersey
2006: Ridgefield, Connecticut
2007: Shelton, Connecticut
2008: Hamilton Township, New Jersey
2009: Easton, Connecticut
2010: Mahopac, New York
2011: Mifflinville, Pennsylvania
2012: Flanders, New Jersey
2013: Shelton, Connecticut
2014: Danville, Pennsylvania
2015: Gardiner, New York
2016: Oneonta, New York
2017: State College, Pennsylvania
2018: Wallkill, New York
2019: Florida, New York
2020: Oneonta, New York
2021: Elkton, Maryland
2022: Queensbury, New York
2023: Vestal, New York
2024: West Stockbridge, Massachusetts
2025: East Greenbush, New York















