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Surprise! Olden days were 'golden' at holidays
Milwuakee Journal Sentinel ^ | Dec. 1, 2002 | John Gurda

Posted on 12/04/2002 2:43:44 PM PST by afraidfortherepublic

Every year, the lights go up a little earlier. Every year, more people ignore the ghosts and jack-o'-lanterns of Halloween, sail right past the Pilgrims and turkeys of Thanksgiving and proceed directly to Christmas.

The first house on our block was decorated in October, even before the leaves were down.

The stores, of course, are much worse offenders. I was still wearing a T-shirt when the seasonal aisles in our local Kmart came alive with fake greenery and blinking lights. Christmas seems to fill an entire quarter of the year, and the day is fast approaching when back-to-school sales will go head-to-head with holiday specials.

Our ancestors were different, weren't they? Not for them, this obsession with shopping and spending that grips us every holiday season. They kept Christ in Christmas, gathering in reverence around the Nativity scene and shunning the crass commercialism that rules our celebration. Didn't they?

Well, guess again. I sampled Christmas issues of the Milwaukee Sentinel from the 1800s, and what I found surprised me. Yes, the 19th century was less secular and less cynical than the 21st; the newspaper carried Yuletide poetry, lengthy sermon excerpts and detailed stories about the good works being done during the Christmas season.

But it was not hard to find the dollar signs hiding in the greenery or the unmistakable signs of holiday stress.

Consider a Christmas editorial from 1846 - the same year Milwaukee became a city. The Sentinel's editor began, innocently enough, by invoking the spirit of a Dickens Christmas: "The return of the Holiday season, associated from early childhood with pleasant memories of family gatherings, friendly greetings, and general festivity, seems to diffuse a genial glow throughout the whole community and to stir up in every heart its best and purest feelings."

There followed a baldly promotional listing of stores in the ragtag frontier town that offered toys, books, dry goods, groceries, variety wares and "articles of dress and fancy work."

"He must be hard to please, indeed," the editor coaxed, "who cannot find something to his taste in making the round we have indicated. To those who think of buying we say, buy quickly."

Milwaukee's commercial pace quickened perceptibly as the century wore on, and the Christmas rush got more and more hectic.

In 1898, the Sentinel noticed a transformation in downtown Milwaukee: "There is an epidemic of brown-paper parcels. They form processions on the streets - one sees packages coming and going as he sees bits of green moving everywhere on a Palm Sunday. . . . Indeed, the bundles seem to have possession of the streets and the cars, and the human beings are subordinate and not essential."

The newspaper had particular sympathy for the shopper, typically male, who put off his purchases until the last minute: "All day long he will wander from place to place like a peddler and will find no peace. . . . He is tired, cross, snubbed, and finally despairing. Late in the day he buys something particularly inappropriate at a price far beyond his means and is thoroughly unhappy."

The engine of Christmas commerce was in high gear by the end of the 19th century. December issues of the 1898 Sentinel were larded with advertisements for all types of gifts.

Heyn's store offered willow doll carriages for 33 cents and dolls for 39 cents. (These were "J.D. Kestner's celebrated corked and stuffed, kid body, bisque head Dolls," normally priced at 65 cents.)

Gimbel's advertised 100-piece sets of porcelain dinnerware for $4.98 and sets of Haviland china for less than $8.

Espenhain's, another downtown department store, sold "Genuine Mountain Lion Rugs, full head, open mouth, value $35, a handsome present, at $22.50."

J.B. Thiery & Co. had "High-Grade Kimball" pianos starting at $265, and Ripple's, on 3rd St., promised to "Make Your Feet Merry" with $3 shoes.

American Beauty roses, however, sold for the surprisingly modern price of $24 a dozen in 1898. "Worth their weight in gold," said the Sentinel, reporting a rush of out-of-town orders, "especially from millionaire lumbermen in the Northern woods."

(You can multiply by 21 to find the current dollar values for all these items. Most were still astoundingly cheap, although the roses would have cost more than $500.)

With so much to buy, Christmas festivity turned to Christmas frenzy. Dec. 24, reported the Sentinel, was "a wild carnival time of belated gift-buying."

Men were once again the principal offenders. I confess to a feeling of familiarity with this description: "Men almost invariably leave their Christmas buying to the last, and then at the eleventh hour rush forth intent only on spending a given sum in a given time. . . . What he wants is to spend his money, as speedily and smoothly as possible."

The result was "many a feminine tear over masculine density of intellect."

But it wasn't just last-minute shoppers who found the commercial crush of Christmas simply too much at times. Male or female, the relentless pressures of the season made some Milwaukeeans want to scream.

The Sentinel quoted a particularly expressive malcontent in 1898: "Christmas is overdone and overrated. It is a season of reckless extravagance, of entailing obligations on other people and of striving to meet obligations that ought never to have been thrust on one. It's a bore, a stupid farce, and I'm done with it. Not a present shall I make."

Feeling a little overwhelmed by all the holiday hoopla? Take heart. You're carrying on an old Yuletide tradition.

John Gurda, a Milwaukee historian, writes for the Crossroads section on the first Sunday of each month.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: christmas; culture; customs; history; holiday; maleshoppers; shopping
I thought this was an interesting historical perspective on the celebration of Christmas in the 1800s in a frontier town. I hope others enjoy this peek to the past.
1 posted on 12/04/2002 2:43:44 PM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: 80sReaganite; afraidfortherepublic; american_ranger; An American In Dairyland; angelo; Angus_Day; ..
A Wisconsin Ping if you missed this in Sunday's paper.
2 posted on 12/04/2002 2:45:23 PM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: afraidfortherepublic
Interesting article. The world has always been at odds with the Spirit of Christmas (Jesus Christ). Thanks for a good post.
3 posted on 12/04/2002 4:04:54 PM PST by viaveritasvita
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To: afraidfortherepublic
I;ve only read the first bit, and will get right back to it....but just wanted to pop in and advise that here in Southern Kaliforniastan, the "season" gets it's first sniffs on Labor Day weekend....first weekend in Septober!
4 posted on 12/04/2002 4:07:55 PM PST by ErnBatavia
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To: afraidfortherepublic
This is true. I have a book by Karal Ann Marling called "Merry Christmas" that describes in detail Christmas during the 1800s and early 1900s. It was in many ways just as frentic as Christmas is celebrated today.

I start Christmas early but for a different reason. So that I can be all done with preparations by Thanksgiving so that by this time of year, I can just sit by the tree and sip my eggnog with a roaring fireplace and a good book. (In recent years, with also a laptop running Free Republic)

5 posted on 12/04/2002 4:11:01 PM PST by SamAdams76
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To: afraidfortherepublic
I remember hearing the names of most of the 1898 stores from my Grandma (Gimbels, of course, was still around when I lived in Milwaukee).

I do want one of these, although I think the dog would never be the same:

Espenhain's, another downtown department store, sold "Genuine Mountain Lion Rugs, full head, open mouth, value $35, a handsome present, at $22.50."

6 posted on 12/04/2002 4:19:25 PM PST by Catspaw
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To: afraidfortherepublic
The commercialism of Christmas never bothered me. I could always choose to engage in it or not. I suspect what is different now, if anything, is the transformation of Christmas into some meaningless "Holidays." I'm sure in 1898 you were likely to see more symbols of Christ among the ads for merchandise.
7 posted on 12/04/2002 4:31:34 PM PST by Larry Lucido
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To: afraidfortherepublic
Merry Christmas Cheeseheads bump!
8 posted on 12/04/2002 10:00:36 PM PST by mafree
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To: ErnBatavia
...the "season" gets it's first sniffs on Labor Day weekend

Sad, but since you won't be getting snow in S. CA as a signal, it's probably understandable.

9 posted on 12/05/2002 9:44:24 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: SamAdams76
So that I can be all done with preparations by Thanksgiving so that by this time of year, I can just sit by the tree and sip my eggnog with a roaring fireplace and a good book.

Sounds like a good plan -- especially that FreeRepublic on the laptop part.

10 posted on 12/05/2002 9:45:21 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Larry Lucido
I'm sure in 1898 you were likely to see more symbols of Christ among the ads for merchandise.

Maybe, maybe not. It would be interesting to research it.

11 posted on 12/05/2002 9:46:12 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Catspaw
"Genuine Mountain Lion Rugs, full head, open mouth, value $35, a handsome present, at $22.50."

That would be something, wouldn't it? I have a picture of my grandfather as a 3 year old boy taken in Oregon, circa 1892, and he is standing on a white, or light colored, fur rug, holding some kind of stick or pull toy. I've always wondered what kind of fur it was. It's rather shaggy, with long hair lapping over my grandfathers high button shoes, and resembles a wolf or polar bear in my mind. I imagine the rug belonged to the photograper, as it is a studio portrait. It is interesting how tastes change.

12 posted on 12/05/2002 9:51:54 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: viaveritasvita
John Gurda is an interesting chronicler or early day Milwaukee. He's always got a good story to tell.
13 posted on 12/05/2002 9:53:34 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: mafree
Merry Christmas Cheeseheads bump!

Backatcha, and a Happy New Year, too.

14 posted on 12/05/2002 9:54:35 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Luis Gonzalez
Ping from a snowy state.
15 posted on 12/05/2002 9:55:47 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: afraidfortherepublic
My paternal grandfather had his office & his home filled with a variety of taxidermy--lots of deer & elk heads, a bearskin, you name it. We loved it.
16 posted on 12/05/2002 11:11:31 AM PST by Catspaw
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To: afraidfortherepublic
Thanks for the ping(s). Merry Christmas to you and B.
17 posted on 12/05/2002 1:50:09 PM PST by gorush
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