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How New York invented Christmas
NY Daily News ^ | December 23 2007 | John Steele Gordon

Posted on 12/23/2007 7:40:24 AM PST by knighthawk

New York has given the country and the world many things in its 380-year history — the hot dog, the American musical, the martini, electric signs — but who knew it also gave us what the modern world thinks of as the traditional way to celebrate Christmas?

Christmas was originally a combination of the day of worship of the birth of Christ and the Roman winter solstice festival called the Saturnalia. The latter was a very raucous, townwide affair, and its raunchy and riotous ways persisted until nearly modern times.

Then the Puritans outlawed Christmas altogether. When it was revived in 1660, it was a calmer affair, and still celebrated on a community basis.

It was New York City that changed all that, pioneering the family — and very child-centered — holiday that has since spread around the world. This is not surprising, perhaps, seeing that Santa Claus is New York's patron saint.

No, really. The Dutch ship that brought the first settlers to Manhattan was named for St. Nicholas, the patron saint of old Amsterdam as well as children.

It was long a Dutch tradition for children to get presents on St. Nicholas Day, Dec. 6, often put in their shoes or stockings for them to find in the morning. The children of non-Dutch families, noticing how well the Dutch children were making out on Dec. 6, were soon successfully lobbying their parents to give them presents as well.

Often these presents came on Christmas instead of St. Nicholas Day.

Then, around the turn of the 19th century, New York's emerging literary establishment created much of the folklore of the modern Christmas. Washington Irving wrote about St. Nicholas ("Sinterklaes" in one Dutch form of the name, soon anglicized to "Santa Claus"). In Irving's "Diederich Knickerbocker's History of New York," Sinterklaes rode through the skies in a horse and wagon and went down chimneys to deliver presents to children.

In 1821, an American children's book called "The Children's Friend" changed Santa's horse and wagon to a reindeer and sleigh. Then in 1823, Clement Clarke Moore penned the most famous Christmas poem of them all, "A Visit from St. Nicholas." Moore was about as New York as it gets. His family's Manhattan estate had been named for the Chelsea Hospital in London — and that then gave its name to the Manhattan neighborhood, which Moore developed. It was Moore who made the number of Santa's reindeer eight and gave them their names.

New York merchants, knowing a good thing when they saw one, began to push the New York tradition of gift-giving, decorating their stores and filling their windows with merchandise designed to catch the eyes of kids. They figured, quite correctly, that the fastest way to a parent's wallet was through their children.

A.T. Stewart, the greatest New York merchant of the time — he more or less invented the department store — also was a major importer of dry goods and other merchandise from abroad, which he wholesaled to storekeepers in other cities around the country.

At first, there was no single, standard image of Santa Claus. But in the 1860s, the great American political cartoonist Thomas Nast contributed drawings (like the one pictured above) to Harper's Weekly — a New York publication, of course — that fixed to the present day the image of Santa Claus as a jolly, bearded, fat man in a fur-trimmed cap. Nast often depicted Santa visiting the troops fighting the Civil War.

By the 20th century, the New York-inspired American Christmas traditions were hallowed ones. But New Yorkers kept adding to them anyway. In 1940, Irving Berlin wrote what has become the most popular Christmas song of all time, "White Christmas." Nine years later, Robert May and his New Yorker brother-in-law, the composer Johnny Marks, added a ninth reindeer to Santa's sleigh, Rudolph.

It is, perhaps, a sign of New York City's incomparable multiethnic synergy, which reaches right back to the present-seeking children of Dutch days, that both Marks and Berlin were, of course, Jewish.

Gordon, who grew up in Manhattan, has written several books of history, including "Empire of Wealth: The Epic History of American Economic Power."


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: christmas; history; santaclaus; sinterklaas
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1 posted on 12/23/2007 7:40:25 AM PST by knighthawk
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To: MizSterious; Nix 2; green lantern; BeOSUser; Brad's Gramma; dreadme; Turk2; keri; ...

Ping


2 posted on 12/23/2007 7:40:55 AM PST by knighthawk (We will always remember We will always be proud We will always be prepared so we may always be free)
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To: knighthawk

3 posted on 12/23/2007 7:45:32 AM PST by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: knighthawk

That’s a fascinating article. I suppose it was also a New York advertising agency that gave us Santa draped in “Coca-cola red.”


4 posted on 12/23/2007 7:50:00 AM PST by Petronski (Reject the liberal superfecta: huckabee, romney, giuliani, mccain)
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To: knighthawk

I read the story this AM.

It’s a nice story; I hope that it is read and appreciated as such.

Often, the mention of NYC illicits a certain small degree of animosity, let’s hope that doesn’t happen here.

Yes, Christmas should be first and foremost a religious celebration, and yes, the commercialization of the birth of Christ is wont to be frowned upon. But how we celebrate Christmas is up to each of us undividually, yes?

There is no denying the joy and wonderment on the faces of our children and grandchildren when these iconic images and songs fill the air and the airwaves.

So...thanks New York.


5 posted on 12/23/2007 7:51:25 AM PST by StatenIsland (I'm a Dead-Cat Republican; I'd vote for a dead cat before a Democrat.)
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To: StatenIsland

undividually = individually. Oops.


6 posted on 12/23/2007 7:52:40 AM PST by StatenIsland (I'm a Dead-Cat Republican; I'd vote for a dead cat before a Democrat.)
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To: knighthawk
My favorite is Olive, the other reindeer.
7 posted on 12/23/2007 7:53:40 AM PST by mtbopfuyn (I think the border is kind of an artificial barrier - San Antonio councilwoman Patti Radle)
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To: knighthawk

P.S.: Irving Berlin penned at least part of “White Christmas” while sunning himself poolside at the Arizona Biltmore Resort and Spa in Phoenix.


8 posted on 12/23/2007 7:54:02 AM PST by Jeff Chandler ("Liberals want to save the world for the children they aren't having." -Mark Steyn)
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To: StatenIsland
There's a reason people stream to NYC constantly -- it's almost a pilgrimage. This is part of it.

Just the other day someone told that a friend visited from New Zealand, where it's summer now and Santas sweat in their suits. "It's the first time Christmas has seemed real to me," she said. "People are supposed to be bundled up, carolling on the sidewalk."

Yes, there is something uniquely and positively American about New York and about a winter Christmas celebration.

All the more reason to do the semantic ass-kicking on the wimps (yes-it will an easy wupping) who aspire to sanitize our language of Christ.

9 posted on 12/23/2007 7:59:50 AM PST by the invisib1e hand (whose spirit is hillary channelling these days?)
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To: knighthawk

10 posted on 12/23/2007 8:01:33 AM PST by big'ol_freeper ("Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not." ~ Thomas Jefferson)
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To: knighthawk; SJackson

Oh, brother. This is reminiscent of the Russians claiming they invented everything.


11 posted on 12/23/2007 8:06:15 AM PST by raybbr (You think it's bad now - wait till the anchor babies start to vote!)
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To: raybbr

Then tell us please how the modern concept of Santa Claus, the reindeer, the whole secular aspect of Christmas came to be.


12 posted on 12/23/2007 8:14:00 AM PST by wtc911 ("How you gonna get back down that hill?")
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To: wtc911

How New York invented Christmas

Are saying that Christmas didn't exist before NY "invented" it?

13 posted on 12/23/2007 8:26:50 AM PST by raybbr (You think it's bad now - wait till the anchor babies start to vote!)
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To: wtc911
Hey Buddy, Merry Christmas,

Not only what you said, but religious freedom, which gives us the ‘right’ to celebrate Christmas (though presently under attack)was started in the New World in present day NYC 350 years ago this coming Thursday, Dec. 27.

14 posted on 12/23/2007 8:28:31 AM PST by Roccus (..........................FOR RENT......................)
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To: facedown
This would seem to be a counter point to an article I encountered while traveling in Europe last week: How Britain Invented Christmas
15 posted on 12/23/2007 8:39:06 AM PST by Mad_Tom_Rackham (Elections have consequences.)
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To: knighthawk

“They figured, quite correctly, that the fastest way to a parent’s wallet was through their children.”

Thooooooooose BASTARDS!

Ah, Merry Christmas all the same.


16 posted on 12/23/2007 8:43:49 AM PST by TalBlack
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To: Mad_Tom_Rackham
Oh, come on....We all know that Al Gore's great, great, great, great grandfather invented Christmas.

But something got misinterpreted along the way...

The original Gore story, concocted by right wing conspirators read: Nicholas Gore slayed his way to the top"...

17 posted on 12/23/2007 8:49:25 AM PST by Sacajaweau ("The Cracker" will be renamed "The Crapper")
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To: Mad_Tom_Rackham

Britain invented modern Christmas, New York invented Santa Claus. There is a difference. The article confuses the issue.


18 posted on 12/23/2007 9:00:34 AM PST by nwrep
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To: Roccus

Would you be thinking of the Flushing Remonstrance?


19 posted on 12/23/2007 9:30:22 AM PST by xkaydet65
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To: StatenIsland
Very interesting story.

One reason New York City elicits some animosity is that it has long been at the forefront of the radical secularization of this country. And Christmas isn't really much different than any other aspect of life. If you were to walk around New York City today you'd have a hard time convincing yourself that there's anything Christian about this holiday season.

20 posted on 12/23/2007 10:19:59 AM PST by Alberta's Child (I'm out on the outskirts of nowhere . . . with ghosts on my trail, chasing me there.)
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