Christmas Trees- Traditions in our Homes

Christmas treesOur first tradition we thought of is the Christmas Tree.   Some of us went out this past weekend and picked a special tree from the tree farm on Choose and Cut Day and tied them to the top of our cars to haul home. Some of these trips involved sleigh rides /hayrides to the mountains.  Some were nearer to us in the Piedmont.    Some of us stopped at a local tree lot set up on a corner near our home and picked one and tied it on top.  Others of us get the tree out of the attic or garage and put it in our house already with lights on it.   They are not real.   They don’t need water.  They don’t smell good.

Then it’s time to decorate our trees.  Some of us have more than one tree in our house.  Some of us have none because we don’t celebrate Christmas.   Some of us have only one in the family room.   We put on lights, we add ornaments some of them favorites from many years of collecting just right ones.   Some belonged to our parents when they were little.   A few came from grandmas/grandpas.  Some came from special trips we made.  We added tinsel and some added popcorn or berry garland we made.   Some put angels on top and some put stars on top.  Some had white lights, some red or green or blue lights.  Some had multi-colored on the same tree.  They are tiny little lights.

There are many kinds of trees used in America but these are common ones.

 Firs  Pine Spruces
 

Douglas

Balsam

Fraser

Scotch

White

White

Norway

Blue

  •  What kind of tree/plants do you use?  Do you see the same types in homes in your country?
  • What is your favorite ornament for the tree?

History of Christmas Tree—Early British settlers to North American colonies rarely observed Christmas and did not cut down or decorate trees.  Pennsylvanian German settlements had community trees as early as 1747.  Germany is credited  for the decorated Christmas Tree as we know it.

Decorations were still of a ‘home-made’ variety in 1747  . Young Ladies spent hours at Christmas Crafts, quilling snowflakes and stars, sewing little pouches for secret gifts and paper baskets with sugared almonds in them. Small bead decorations, fine drawn out silver tinsel came from Germany together with beautiful Angels to sit at the top of the tree. Candles were often placed into wooden hoops for safety.  Decorations today have changed from ‘home made’ to store bought in many homes.

In early America, Christmas trees were considered a quaint foreign custom.  America was so geographically large, that it tended to have ‘pockets’ of customs relating to the immigrants who had settled in a particular area. It was not until the telegraph communications really got going in the 19th century, that such customs began to spread.  Thus references to decorated trees in America before about the middle of the 19th century are very rare. But by 1850, the Decorative Christmas trees came forth.   They were embellished with fruits, nuts, tiny wafers, paper cuttings and small candles.  Christmas tree had become fashionable in the eastern states.

Before the war the tree lost popularity then after World War II, the Christmas tree again became popular!

The first national American Christmas Tree was lighted in the year 1923 on the White House lawn by President Calvin Coolidge. A tree from the National Christmas Tree Association has been displayed in the Blue Room of the White House since 1966.

In 2002, 21% of United States households had a real tree, 48% had an artificial tree and 32% had no tree.  There are many debates about whether you should buy a real tree or an artificial tree.

 

christmas tree for article

What is your opinion and why?

4 thoughts on “Christmas Trees- Traditions in our Homes

  1. What a nice post and very informative. I still like homemade decorations on Christmas trees. I also prefer a real tree, they can be recycled as compost and are grown in a sustainable way. In some places, Switzerland for example, they still decorate their trees with real candles!
    An age old question is why han’t the tradition of mince pies caught on in USA?

    Mr E North Yorkshire (Eng).

    • Mr. E,
      The students wondered about mince pies. They had never heard of a mince pie. Can you describe one for them? Also they want to know why the tree doesn’t burn with candles on it?

  2. Well the trees do burn a little sometimes! People have a plant spray filled with water and when you smell ‘pine smoke’ they just give it a little spray. It’s hard to describe even when I have seen it in action. People do not to decorate trees with electric lights if they use candles. The candles have special holders that clip to a branch and are weighted so that they stay upright. The candles are about the size of an index finger.
    Mince pies are pastries that are filled with fruit,orange/lemon peel, sugar and spices. Most children really love them but some people are not so keen. I’ll see if I can get Mrs Monaghan from ‘A Room With a View’ to make some with her class and post on their blog.
    There are so many things that are shared between USA and UK but it strikes me as delightfully strange that mince pies are an exception.
    Mr E (North Yorkshire. Eng)

  3. Dear Mrs Todd,
    Mince pies and sprouts are a bit like marmite… you love ’em or you loathe ’em! Our final part of our Australia topic is to make a mince pie for the Australian market. We began by tasting mince pies, and there are as many different tastes as there are pies!
    My mum traditionally makes her mincemeat in November, so it can mature nicely for the mince pie season. My kids go up to help her, and it takes them an afternoon to chop, peel, and mix all the ingredients. There is no ‘mince’ in it – although the first mince pies were made with meat.
    I will do my best to put out a post about our mince pies before Christmas, although it’s a bit of a race against time as we enter the last two weeks, and we haven’t yet put up our tree at home!
    We alternate between having a real tree if we are staying home for the entire Christmas season, or an artificial tree (less mess, less ‘Christmassy’ feel!) if we are going away for much of it. This year we haven’t decided yet…. we’ll be away in Scotland for the New Year. However, our tradition is to always use the same decorations, so they include some really falling apart ones that the children made in their early years at primary school… the effect is ramshackle, but we love it! We have coloured lights and a star on top. Some people put an angel or a fairy on the top of the Christmas tree. We hang chocolates up there, but for some reason they don’t seem to last very long???
    Mrs Monaghan

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