Tomorrow morning, something rare and meaningful will happen at the Cambridge Public Library.
Starting at 7:30 a.m., a professional team from Elhannon Nursery will relocate the Village’s Sesquicentennial Commemorative Sugar Maple originally planted in 2015 to mark Cambridge’s 150th anniversary. The tree currently stands in the direct path of the Library’s upcoming Phase II addition, funded through the New York Forward program.
Rather than cut it down, we’re moving it.
How the Move Will Work
Elhannon specializes in large-tree relocation. They’ll use precision equipment to extract the tree’s full root ball and replant it elsewhere on the Library grounds.
DPW Superintendent Matt Toleman will oversee the process and work with Tree Committee Chair Adina Daar to finalize the new location. The move should take about five hours, from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. During that time, nearby walkways will be closed for safety, and the Library hours will be delayed during the project until safe access to the building is restored.
Why It Matters
This isn’t just about saving a tree. It’s about preserving part of our civic story.
The Sesquicentennial Maple was planted during a community celebration involving the Village Board, Boy Scouts, and former Mayor Bogle who co-chaired the 150th Anniversary Committee alongside me. Trustee Scott Lucey, now a local judge, was there too.
A decade later, the Library is entering a new chapter. The tree will grow with it, just in a new spot.
Come See It Happen
Residents are welcome to stop by between 8:00 a.m. and noon on Monday to watch the move. It’s not every day you see a tree with this much history (and this much heart) lifted and replanted with care.
This is Cambridge doing what we do best: honoring the past while building for the future.
- Mayor James W. Sweeney
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