In the first half of the 19th century, as more Americans
started to celebrate the holiday again, they transformed Christmas from a noisy
festival into a day to celebrate family, friends, and goodwill.
When American Style Christmas Celebrations Began
In the early 1800s a person's religious beliefs played a
major role in how they celebrated the holiday. For instance, Protestants like Episcopalians
and Moravians, held religious services at Christmas and got into the spirit of
the holiday by putting up seasonal decorations. Other denominations honored the
holiday with music, parties, eating, and drinking. Calvinist Christians and many
other puritan based communities didn’t celebrate the day at all.
Early 19th Century Christmas |
Before the Civil War, Christmas was celebrated differently in
the North than the South. Northerners who lived in states with puritan
influences didn’t observe the holiday and felt Thanksgiving was a more
appropriate holiday to celebrate.
For most Southern Americans, Christmas was a major community
event with parties, get-togethers, and gatherings. In fact, the first states to
make Christmas a legal holiday were Dixie states: Alabama in 1836, followed by
Louisiana and Arkansas in 1838. By 1860, 14 other states had followed. And, in
1870, Christmas was officially proclaimed a federal holiday by President
Ulysses Grant.
Christmas Party |
Children's books played a key role in spreading Christmas
traditions, especially those of trimming the trees and of Santa Claus bringing
gifts. From the 1800’s to the 1940’s, a children's journal called “St.
Nicholas”, written and designed for families out West who lived in isolated
areas, offered 500 pages of stories, poetry, contests, games, and crafts. It proved
exceptionally helpful in keeping children entertained during the long winter
months on the frontier.
Also, Christian denominations began to put aside religious
distinctions regarding the meaning of Christmas and celebrated the holiday in
Sunday school classes. Women's magazines ran features on decking the halls for
the holidays, as well as articles on how to create these decorations.
Traditions
Christmas developed into an important holiday for families to
celebrate at home. Influenced by German immigrants, Americans began setting up an
evergreen tree in their house for the holiday and putting small candles, sweets,
and toys on its branches. The 14th President of the United States, Franklin
Pierce, is credited as the first one to set up a Christmas tree in the White
House. Christmas Trees were first sold commercially in the United States in
1851 and were randomly cut down from the forests.
Community Christmas |
Americans also began to follow the European tradition of
giving Christmas gifts. By the last quarter of the nineteenth century,
Americans enthusiastically decorated trees, caroled, baked, and shopped for the
Christmas season.
How They Celebrated the Holiday
In the mid-1800s, the pioneers, cowboys, explorers, and
mountain men, who blazed trails to the west, held modest but merry Christmas
celebrations. On the frontier, you could find soldiers at out-of-the-way
outposts singing Christmas carols and roasting a holiday dinner of venison over
an open hearth. And, pioneer families in rugged log cabins making presents for
each other. Though they didn’t have sparkly trimmings or bountiful feasts,
their Christmas traditions, like our modern ones, involved family, food, and
fun.
These settlers were far away from their families in the East
and didn’t have a lot of goods or money on hand to have a big Christmas celebration.
Food, gifts, and decorations were hard to come by on the frontier, so they had
to be creative in making their own. Hardy pioneers decorated their homes with
whatever they could find: boughs of evergreens, pinecones, holly, nuts, berries,
or hand cut snowflakes. Some might even have a Christmas tree they’d decorate
with clipped pictures, old buttons, lace, ribbons, strings of apples, paper
chains, yarn, berries, popcorn, dried fruit, and homemade ornaments crafted of
cloth or carved wood or dolls made of straw. Cookie dough ornaments and
gingerbread men were also popular. For those who set candles on their Christmas
tree, they lit them just once, then dimmed them to prevent a fire.
A Family Christmas |
Some pioneers lived where wood was too scarce for them to have
a Christmas tree, so they’d fasten wooden scraps together in the shape of a
tree or gather sagebrush and hang Christmas ornaments on it.
Every home had some kind of Christmas dinner, whatever they could
manage. Pioneer Christmas menus varied a great deal. Traditional Christmas food
of the period included roast beef, turkey, ham, potatoes, pickles, white bread,
fruitcakes, cookies, puddings, and pies. Chocolate, tea, and coffee were
imported and not always available. The settlers usually set out preserved
fruits and vegetables, along with fresh game if possible. The pioneer women
began baking for the Holiday weeks ahead of time, leaving the plum pudding to
age in the pot until Christmas dinner.
While some Christmas presents were ordered from catalogs,
most were handmade such as dolls, clothes, and toys of all sorts. Months before
Christmas, family members began crafting homemade gifts like corn husk dolls,
sachets, carved toys, pillows, footstools, knitted winter accessories, and
embroidered handkerchiefs. If the family had a good year, the children might
find candy, small gifts, cookies, or fruit in their stockings.
19th Century Christmas Card with Odd Images |
On Christmas Eve, Pioneer families sung carols around the
Christmas tree or fireplace.
On Christmas Day, most would attend church, return home for
the traditional Christmas meal, and spend the day visiting with friends and
neighbors, singing, playing games, and enjoying each other’s company.
Even the most basic present day Christmas celebrations are
filled with a sense of awe and gratefulness, and it was the same for the
pioneer families of the 19th century.
A Joyful Christmas! |
Wishing you and your family a safe and very Merry Christmas!
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Amazing that President Grant declared an official federal holiday for Christmas. These days that would not happen. It would have to be a "winter holiday" or some such since the word Christmas is not allowed in public schools. Instead of Christmas holiday we have "winter break."
ReplyDeleteThe pioneers certainly had the spirit of Christmas I see here in your post singing Christmas carols and making their presents themselves. I remember my childhood Christmas wishes as I thumbed through the pages of toys in the Sears Catalogue. Dreamland.
I enjoyed your article, Shirleen and I wish you and your family the best Christmas ever.
I would love to find a copy of the 500 page St. Nicholas book, wouldn't you?
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