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An amiable history of Christmas. (Books About Antiques).

The Magazine Antiques

| December 01, 2002 | Mayor, Alfred | COPYRIGHT 2002 Brant Publications, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

The author of this handsomely designed book is the retired chairman of the advertising firm Ogilvy and Mather (now Ogilvy One) and his brother is the retired editor-in-chief of Newsweek. Both these modern-day titans love Christmas and still give each other what they call "early morning" presents to keep them happy until it is time to raid the stockings. The advertising brother, Jock Elliott, has collected everything to do with Christmas for many years and has now set down what he has learned about its origin.

The opening spread of the Introduction is composed of facsimiles of letters to Santa Claus written by the author when he was small. His wish lists were both extensive and expensive. One year he lobbied Santa for a fountain pen and pencil, a "big trick box," an electric steamroller, roller skates, a Christmas tree, a combination knife with fork, spoon, and blade and a cowboy suit. He also included his brother's list: a wristwatch, roller skates, "one runner" ice skates, a trick box, a steam derrick, a two-wheel bicycle, "and that is all." After this refreshing admission of greed, the author affirms that in case of conflicting stories about Christmas, of which there are many he will pick the one he considers the most likely, which sets the ground rules for this amiable tale.

In pagan time the winter solstice, when the days begin to lengthen, was a time of revelry, although of a considerably more boisterous nature than the modern Christmas office party. Masters and slaves exchanged roles and both "ate and drank themselves insensible; they would lurch to the vomitorium and stagger back for the next course. One way or another, everyone had a very good time." The church hoped to woo the pagans "from worship of the sun-god to worship of the Son of God," but succeeded only in establishing a two-track celebration--one pious and one raucous. In 1647 Oliver Cromwell forbade the celebration of Christmas, and in 1659 the Puritan government of Massachusetts declared Christmas illegal. Charles II reinstated the holiday in England after the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, and the 1659 law was abolished in 1681 in the American colonies.

By the end of the eighteenth century Santa Claus, Christmas shopping, presents, trees, and cards had yet to be invented. Saint Nicholas, a benevolent fourth-century Greek priest, was brought to the United States by Washington Irving, John Pintard, and Clement Clarke Moore, all New Yorkers. Irving made Saint Nicholas the patron saint of the city in Diedrich Knickerbocker's History of New York (1809), and in the 1821 edition he has him riding over the treetops in a wagon, distributing presents to children. Pintard, once-prosperous merchant and antiquarian, in 1810 commissioned a broadside of "Sancte Claus" carrying presents for children on the occasion of a banquet he gave on December 6 in honor of Saint Nicholas's name day. Moore was probably the author of the now familiar poem The Night Before Christmas ...

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Source: HighBeam Research, An amiable history of Christmas. (Books About Antiques).

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