If whoever is doing the felling would be amenable to cutting the 24" trunk separately and then putting chainsaw notches in a straight line along it, it is quite an easy matter for you to split it in half with wedges and a small sledge hammer. Beech cleaves quite easily, especially when green.
This would be considerably cheaper than organising a mill to cut full width green boards that may (will) cup. You'll take lots of tension out with splitting and when the halves are dry you have the option of quarter sawing some boards, or chunkier pieces or whatever.
The half rounds must be stored with the same care as planks - off the ground and under cover.
There's also the option of cutting shorter lengths of straight trunk, cleaving them in half, then splitting off thin, quartered boards with a froe. Very stable; good for panels, boxes, etc.
The bough wood will have more tension in it so is really best used for turning (after cleaving) as planking this usually leads to some very interesting shapes indeed.
Though there may be lots of bemoaning about merely Beech handles on planes around here, no one would say no to a beech bench. It's dead useful for all sorts of jobs.
But whatever you do or don't do, it's very good firewood so no loss really. The more I write, the more jealous I'm getting, so I'll stop.