Date: Fri 28-Nov-1997
Date: Fri 28-Nov-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Ram-Pasture-Tree-Lighting
Full Text:
A Few Hardy Souls Ensure The Tree Lighting Tradition Shines Brightly
(with photos)
Main Street will once again be aglow in lights on Friday night, December 5,
for the annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony. For the 14th straight year,
Newtown residents will gather at the Ram Pasture on Elm Drive to celebrate
what has become the town's official start to the Christmas season.
The lights were strung on the tree last Saturday, a bitterly cold, wet day, by
Joe Migone of Bartlett Tree Service and former Bartlett employee Tim
Sonnenfroth of Tasco Services, both of whom worked in cherry pickers while
Stan Perrone of Kesco Electric stood on the ground nearby checking all the
strings of lights.
"It don't get no worse than today -- cold and raw," Mr Migone commented as he
maneuvered the bucket he was standing in up to the top of the 100-foot tree.
"Without the volunteers and businesses like Bartlett which donate equipment
and employees to help us, we would never be able to have the tree lighting,"
said Chamber of Commerce member Janet Woycik.
In 1984, the Chamber of Commerce and then-president Sam Eisenbach decided to
undertake a project that would benefit the entire community. The idea came
from Newtown resident Wayland Johnson, a TWA pilot who had seen many Christmas
tree displays during his trips to Europe.
The chamber approved the project and had little trouble finding the right
tree: The Ram Pasture provided the perfect setting. The original
tree-lightning committee included Mrs Woycik, Diana Johnson, Barbara
Kasbarian, Brian and Mary Jane Healey, Dan Dalton of the Bartlett Tree Company
and Stan Perrone.
The first year was a fiasco, according to the committee members. Lights were
ordered which never arrived, forcing Tom Paternoster to make an emergency run
to Cambridge, Mass., to get them. In the freezing cold, chamber members rushed
to screw in the bulbs in preparation for the big event. Then they worried that
no one would show up or something unforeseen might happen.
"What if we pulled the switch and the tree didn't light up?" Janet Woycik
said.
To everyone's relief, hundreds of people showed up and the tree lit on the
first try. As the years passed, more people gathered around the 100-foot tree
to join in the fun. Music by the Newtown High School band and chorus helped to
make the event even more festive, and they continue to do so today.
In 1986 the chamber began a luminaria project in conjunction with the tree
lighting. Residents along Main Street, Elm Drive, Glover Avenue and South Main
set out candles in paper bags and light these luminaria for the tree ceremony.
Soon after the first ceremony, the chamber received a letter from a woman
whose son is buried in the Village Cemetery, across the street from the tree.
She thanked the chamber for allowing her family to celebrate the holidays with
their child once again.
Over the years the volunteers gave up Saturdays -- it takes about six hours to
string the lights on the tree -- and even sleep to make sure the tree lighting
would taken place. Joe Migone, for example, has driven nearly all night to
retrieve Bartlett's alpine cherry picker from locations in other New England
states to bring it to Newtown, making do with two hours' sleep before getting
up to do the lights.
Like many of the volunteers, Stan Perrone said it just wouldn't be Christmas
without the tree lighting ceremony.
"I look at the kids' faces and the parents' faces -- everyone is just
glowing," he said. "It's beautiful. The sense of community is wonderful."
