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Rod Longley, Litchfield Resident and Longtime Foundation Supporter Passes Away

Rod Longley – Litchfield resident and Longtime Foundation Supporter – Passes Away

Founding American Chestnut Foundation “Connecticut Chapter” member and Litchfield resident Rod Longley, passed away October 18th, his 95th birthday.

I got to know Rod Longley and interact with him over several years when we volunteered together with the CT Chapter of the American Chestnut Foundation. I met Rod at a Chapter Annual meeting held in Litchfield at White Memorial in 2003. That meeting represented the beginning of my involvement with restoration efforts, and also the beginning of my relationship with Rod. During my first years of involvement Rod was my primary go to person – a litmus test for ideas about forging the Chapters strategic direction. Rod was tirelessly optimistic and positive unless discussing the Red Sox (“management simply doesn’t know when to remove a pitcher!”). Rod always had ideas for the names of people people to whom I could reach out and ask for assistance with initiatives we’d envisioned. They might be a Newspaper Reporter, a land trust board member, a potential donor, or a landowner interested in using their land for planting a research plot.

Rod had joined TACF in 1991, and was a founding member of the CT Chapter in 1992. He resigned as Director in 2006 after fifteen years as a member, with many of those recently as Director and Vice President. In 2008 we honored him with a lifetime achievement award for his tireless work in promoting the importance of the Chestnut and restoring its ecological role in the forests of New England.

Rod actively planted Chestnut both from the American Chestnut Foundation and the CT Agricultural Experiment Station. Plantings at Topsmead State Park, and White Memorial Conservation Center and Litchfield Hills Audubon’s Boyd Woods Sanctuary were all results of Rod’s interest in planting new and more advanced blight-resistant chestnut. Rod was “Mr. Chestnut of Litchfield.” I learned that he was also an active gardener as told by this quote by John Baker of Litchfield.

Rod was very proud of his blueberry and blackberry patches, surrounded by Eastern Bluebird houses. His crops were so bountiful, friends and neighbors had to come to pick, and he even gave away some of the bushes. One year he coerced me to bring bees to pollinate the blueberries, but I think they were more interested in the Black Locust trees that were blooming nearby and the water in his swimming pool. Rod was also an avid sports fan and rooted for UConn and the Red Sox. In fact, one of his last actions was to watch the Red Sox playoff game the Thursday night before he passed away. Rod was quite a guy and will be missed by many.
John Baker
A Memorial service is planned for Saturday, November 23rd at the First Congregational Church of Litchfield at 11am.

Contributed by Bill Adamsen, Board Member, CT Chapter of the American Chestnut Foundation

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🌰 "The evolving story of New Jersey’s chestnuts" by Alison Mitchell
Check out this article that features insights from our North Central Regional Science Coordinator, Lake Graboski, and also highlights New Jersey Nut Farms’ separate hybridization efforts—showing the range of work underway to bring back the American chestnut.

Click the following link to view the full story: www.newsbreak.com/south-jersey-media-302714994/4444458578919-the-evolving-story-of-new-jersey-s-c...

#americanchestnuts #nature #chestnuts #restoration #conservation #quote #article #explorepage
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🌰 The evolving story of New Jersey’s chestnuts by Alison MitchellCheck out this article that features insights from our North Central Regional Science Coordinator, Lake Graboski, and also highlights New Jersey Nut Farms’ separate hybridization efforts—showing the range of work underway to bring back the American chestnut. Click the following link to view the full story: https://www.newsbreak.com/south-jersey-media-302714994/4444458578919-the-evolving-story-of-new-jersey-s-chestnuts #americanchestnuts #nature #chestnuts #restoration #conservation #quote #article #explorepage

14 CommentsComment on Facebook

I have one of the original American chestnuts growing on my land.. it grows to about 12 feet tall and it dies. it comes back from the root and does the cycle again. it's done this for the last 63 years.

I've got a half dozen proven American chestnut trees in the country park across the street. 60 + feet and bear nuts every year by the ton. the nuts seem to be sterile. no saplings ever. .

Resilience.

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Learn more about this remarkable standing American chestnut in the article “We The People: How Iowa Is Part of the Effort to Save the Rare American Chestnut Tree.” Courtesy of Grace Vance and KCRG.

Visit: www.ktiv.com/2026/01/12/we-people-how-iowa-is-part-effort-save-rare-american-chestnut-tree/

#americanchestnut #chestnuts #restoration #conservation #explorepage
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69 CommentsComment on Facebook

Georgia has a stand of chestnut trees in a secret location. Can they borrow some pollen from this tree to add to their breeding collection? They need a varied gene pool for the future.

A guy named Bill Deeter has just recently observed that trees that have crown gall seem to be warding off the blight. Im really hoping that this will bring back the longevity of the American Chestnut

My Neighbors have a vet old chestnut tree - they have contacted several conservation groups about getting a sapling of a second . So it would produce chestnuts once again-

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A month ago, our President and CEO, Michael Goergen, got to visit the New York Botanical Garden and see the original documentation of chestnut blight taken from a tree in the Bronx Zoo. Feeling a sense of inspiration from the experience, Michael wrote, "Holding that bark brings both grief and resolve. Grief for what was lost. Resolve for the work ahead.

Because for the first time since 1905, we are no longer documenting decline.
We are documenting return.

The American chestnut is not a memory. It is a restoration mission and The American Chestnut Foundation is building the tools and partnerships to finish what Merkel, Murrill, and others could not.

Seeing the original blight records didn’t make the work feel more challenging. It made it feel inevitable.

Restoration is the next chapter. We get to write it."

#explorepage #americanchestnut #history #chestnuts #learn #nature #forestry #trees #blight #restoration #conservation
... See MoreSee Less

A month ago, our President and CEO, Michael Goergen, got to visit the New York Botanical Garden and see the original documentation of chestnut blight taken from a tree in the Bronx Zoo. Feeling a sense of inspiration from the experience, Michael wrote, Holding that bark brings both grief and resolve. Grief for what was lost. Resolve for the work ahead.Because for the first time since 1905, we are no longer documenting decline.We are documenting return.The American chestnut is not a memory. It is a restoration mission and The American Chestnut Foundation is building the tools and partnerships to finish what Merkel, Murrill, and others could not.Seeing the original blight records didn’t make the work feel more challenging. It made it feel inevitable.Restoration is the next chapter. We get to write it.#explorepage #americanchestnut #history #chestnuts #learn #nature #forestry #trees #blight #restoration #conservationImage attachmentImage attachment+1Image attachment

2 CommentsComment on Facebook

Whoo hoo! Sorry, you were not the first to know this. The Chestnut Lady.

Our New England Regional Science Coordinator, Deni Ranguelova, made an appearance on the podcast "Across the Fence" to discuss the American chestnut tree and why we are working to restore them.

Check out the podcast on Youtube at youtu.be/c9EeOc5WIaE?si=80CQtoY4-qeQhjtI

#americanchestnut #chestnuts #podcast #history #restoration #conservation #nature #forestry #explorepage
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4 CommentsComment on Facebook

So like Covid?

This was all because someone in upstate Delaware thought it would be a good idea to grow a Chinese chestnut in their yard so they could show it off to their friends.

😂

New year, new opportunities! Now’s the perfect time to get involved with the American chestnut. 🌱

Check out our January & February events and join the movement!

Visit out events calendar for more info on each event

#americanchestnut #events #volunteer #pennsylvania #castaneapa #Maine #rhodeisland #pennstate #chestnuts #explorepage
... See MoreSee Less

New year, new opportunities! Now’s the perfect time to get involved with the American chestnut. 🌱Check out our January & February events and join the movement!Visit out events calendar for more info on each event#americanchestnut #events #volunteer #pennsylvania #castaneapa #Maine #rhodeisland #pennstate #chestnuts #explorepageImage attachmentImage attachment+2Image attachment
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