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Christmas Tree Shops

Christmas Tree Shops
Subsidiary
Genre Bargains, closeouts
Founded 1970
Founder Charles Bilezikian
Doreen Bilezikian
Headquarters Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts, U.S.
Number of locations
83 (May 2014)
Area served
New England, Mid Atlantic, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Texas
Parent Bed Bath & Beyond
(2003–present)
Website christmastreeshops.com

Christmas Tree Shops is a retail chain that began in Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts in 1970 as a complex of three small stores (Front Shop, Back Shop, and Barn Shop). The first complex, on Route 6A, explains why the name is Christmas Tree Shops instead of Shop. The chain's founders were Doreen and Charles Bilezikian.

Since the 1980s, the chain had slowly been expanding beyond Cape Cod. As of May 2014, the company had 83 stores in 18 states. Expansion for the chain has included stores in Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio. Its newest stores opened in Augusta, Georgia, Dallas, Texas, and Greensboro, North Carolina; the three opened under new ownership. The chain still has a strong presence on Cape Cod, where it operates six locations.

Christmas Tree Shops was acquired by Bed Bath & Beyond in 2003, though the Bilezikians remain involved in the executive operations. The original stores on Route 6A were closed in January 2007, though the site is now occupied by stores owned by the Bilezikians' son Greg. Some of the earlier Cape Cod stores, as in West Dennis, are dwarfed by recently-built stores.

The company maintains distribution centers in Middleboro, Massachusetts, and Florence, New Jersey, the latter opening in 2008. Prior to being moved to Middleboro, distribution was done from the former Cape Cod Coliseum, in South Yarmouth. Middleboro also serves as the chain's new headquarters.

Christmas Tree Shops are bargain stores, selling food, toys, household furnishings, and Christmas decorations. Most stores typically resemble older buildings (Colonial, Victorian, or even Old English barn styles (such as in Sagamore and Pembroke, Massachusetts; and Warwick, Rhode Island). Some, such as the Lynnfield, Massachusetts store, are even more conceptualized; it is known for its lighthouse and fishing village motif.


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