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Home Christmas Tree History History of Christmas Tree
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History of Christmas Tree |
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- 1510 – The first written record of a
decorated Christmas Tree comes from Riga, Latvia. Men of the local
merchants’ guild decorated a tree with artificial roses, danced around
it in the marketplace and then set fire to it. The rose was used for
many year and is considered to be a symbol for the Virgin Mary.
- 1530 – There is record from Alsace, France (then Germany
territory) that trees were sold in the marketplace and brought home and
set up undecorated. Laws limited the size to “8 shoe lengths” (slightly
over 4 feet).
- 1600s – By the 17th century, it was common in Germany to
decorate Christmas Trees with apples. This practice was a holdover from
the 14th and 15th centuries when evergreen boughs hung with apples were
the only prop used in the “miracle plays” that were performed at the
churches on December 24. December 24 was Adam & Eve’s Day in the
early Christian calendar, and the plays were used as ways of teaching
the Bible to a largely illiterate population.
- 1700s – In parts of Austria and Germany, evergreen tips were
brought into the home and hung top down from the ceiling. They were
often decorated with apples, gilded nuts and red paper strips. Edible
ornaments became so popular on Christmas Trees that they were often
called “sugartrees.” The first accounts of using lighted candles as
decorations on Christmas Trees come from France in the 18th century.
- 1800s – The Christmas Tree was introduced in the United
States by German settlers. It rapidly grew from tabletop size to
floor-to-ceiling.
- 1851 – Christmas Trees began to be sold commercially in the United States. They were taken at random from the forests.
- 1853 – Franklin Pierce is credited with bringing the first Christmas Tree to the White House.
- Late 1800s – The first glass ornaments were introduced into
the United States, again from Germany. The first ones were mostly
balls, but later chains of balls, toys and figures became more common.
- Around 1883 – Sears, Roebuck & Company began offering the
first artificial Christmas trees – 33 limbs for $.50 and 55 limbs for
$1.00.
- 1900s – Due to overharvesting, the natural supply of
evergreens began to be decimated. Conservationists became alarmed, and
many magazines began to encourage people to substitute an artificial
“snow” covered tree, consisting of a branch of a deciduous tree wrapped
in cotton.
- 1901 – The first Christmas Tree farm was started in 1901 when
W.V. McGalliard planted 25,000 Norway spruce on his farm in New Jersey.
Also in 1901, Theodore Roosevelt tried to stop the practice of having
Christmas Trees out of concern about the destruction of forests. His
two sons didn’t agree and enlisted the help of conservationist Gifford
Pinchot to persuade the president that, done properly, the practice was
not harmful to the forests.
- 1930s – President Franklin D. Roosevelt started a Christmas Tree farm on his estate in Hyde Park, New York.
- 1966 – The National Christmas Tree Association began its
time-honored tradition of having the Grand Champion grower present a
Christmas Tree to the First Lady for display in the Blue Room of the
White House. That year, Howard Pierce of Black River Falls, Wisconsin,
presented a tree to President Lyndon Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird
Johnson.
- Today – Approximately 25-30 million Real Christmas Trees are
sold each year in the United States. Almost all of these come from
Christmas Tree plantations.
Timeline provided by The Rocks Christmas Tree Farm, Bethlehem, NH.
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