As the words are spoken, you pass
through the wall, and stand upon an open country road, with fields on either
hand. The city had entirely vanished. Not a vestige of it was to be seen. The
darkness and the mist had vanished with it, for it was a clear, cold, winter
day, with snow upon the ground.
You are conscious of a thousand odors
floating in the air, each one connected with a thousand thoughts, and hopes,
and joys, and cares long, long, forgotten.
(Paraphrased
from Stave II of Charles Dickens ‘A Christmas Carol’)
~Welcome to our Home~ The ladies of the house are here to greet you. |
It takes a special mindset to become engulfed into the period surroundings to where one can let go of the present and become immersed - engulfed - into another period in time; it's more than acting in a scripted play or movie; living historians many times can effectively emulate those who wrote the diaries and stories we have read. We have even studied the manner of speech to help replicate, to a great extent, times long past.
Are we perfect?
Not by a long shot.
But when you find the right people to join you, transportation to the past can almost eerily magically happen.
Having the right people can and will make all the difference in the world.
Now, in the 21st century I have my real life family, with my wife of 31 years, four children (three boys and a girl), a daughter-in-law, and a grandson (with another on the way).
~Sisters~ Ah---here is our eldest daughter reading to her younger siblings. |
I don't do too bad either, but I need to work on a few stories.
It does makes for great dinnertime conversations and reminisces, as you shall see.
Grandmother gives her eldest granddaughter a beautiful new shawl to wear for the special Christmas holiday. |
I mean, what is 1st person? In the living history world it is an attempt to act and speak as closely as possible as those who actually lived in the time we are emulating.
And I believe, for the most part, for this year's Christmas at the Fort we did very well. You see, 1st person is much more than only speaking the way they spoke in the old days. I have seen 1st person in such a way that presents the past as a bunch of stiff, cardboard cut outs straight out of Gone With the Wind.
That makes me cringe----!
I feel we, in our little historical group, have become regular normal people of the 1860s, and this year, more than any other, we spoke in a more natural manner, attempting to lose the Hollywood tripe and strict etiquette that many tend to follow.
Oh, we did follow the etiquette of the time, but not in such a way that made us 'characters,' you know? Not once did I hear of anyone speak of 21st century subjects: no modern politics, no talk of movies, TV, or modern entertainment, no "remember at the last reenactments when we..." - - nothing of the sort.
We also didn't use, in the modern sense, words such as 'cool' or 'awesome' or any other of a number of slang used in the 21st century.
Did we make mistakes?
Oh, you betcha! But we caught and corrected ourselves to a more accurate 1860s verbiage.
And, well...my 'sister' and I did, at one time (and one time only) reference a couple of lyrics from the old Jefferson Airplane song, 'White Rabbit,' in a sort of inside joke, but we were the only two to understand it (and we laughed quite hard, in spite of ourselves), so it didn't necessarily take away from anything we were doing.
Sometimes one just simply cannot help themselves when an opportunity arises.
Here you see my 'wife' and I as we prepare to take a walk and visit some of the city sights. |
To help give the barren barracks a Christmas-y look, these soldiers added a bit of greenery. |
Two women brought along some Christmas cheer by way of a carol: they were caroling for the men to bring a slice of home to them. |
We thought it might be a fine idea to stop over at the local hospital to spread some Christmas cheer to those who will not be with their families due to illness over the Christmas tide.
War never really hits someone until they see the men who have been directly affected by it. And for us that place was the hospital. |
And then there were those who were smitten by the pox. We skeedaddled as soon as we played witness to this poor young girl. |
Yikes! My poor wife was frightened of the disease-ridden young lady! |
Back to my sister's home we went to partake in celebrating the holiday with family. |
As folks pertaining to be from the 1860s, we entertained ourselves much in the same manner as our counterparts would have: by decorating a Christmas tree, singing Christmas Carols, playing parlor games, and even doing a fun craft.
Christine & Rosalia, along with their cousin, Andrea, decorate the feather tree. So just what is a feather tree? Here...let me explain (by way of Victoriana Magazine): |
Sister's Feather Tree |
It
had become the fashion to chop off the tip off a large fir tree to use as a
Christmas tree; however, this practice prevented the tree from growing taller
and thus made it useless as a timber tree. Statutes were enacted to limit
people from having more than one tree, hence protecting the forests. With the
introduction of the "goosefeather" feather tree, this problem was
resolved. Goose feathers were plentiful and these feather trees began to be
produced as a cottage industry as the alternative to cutting a live tree. The
goose feather tree became the first artificial Victorian Christmas tree. Metal
wire or sticks were covered with goose, turkey, ostrich or swan feathers. The
feather sticks were drilled into a larger one to resemble the branches on a
tree; the feathers were often dyed green to imitate pine needles. The trees
were made to resemble the locally growing white pines of the German forestland,
so they had wide spaces between their branches, short "needles," and
composition "berries" on the end of every branch tip.
My 'sister' and I next to her decorated feather tree. |
While the tree was being decorated, Elysabeth and her grandmother sang a carol. |
When we are back home on our farm, our two youngest girls are busy all day learning the housewifery duties of their mother, while I keep our eldest daughter, Christine, quite busy with me. As Larissa and I have no sons, Christine is treated as if she were a boy (unfortunate for her, but what can I do?) and helps me with the necessary farm chores such as manuring, plowing, harrowing, fence and barn repairs, and caring for the larger animals such as the horses, cows and pigs.
So when an opportunity to do a feminine craft comes along, why, she is always anxious to learn it and teach others. |
And she did just that on this Christmas Eve day - we found her teaching the other girls a sewing project...a project involving the making of butterfly jewelry that she had learned. |
The servant, Agnes, prepared our Christmas Eve dinner. |
It was a wonderful dinner of turkey, cranberries, mashed potatoes, vegetables, pickles, cheese, breads...and pumpkin pie! |
After dinner, some of the ladies sang Christmas carols and played parlor games, much to the delight of the tour groups, who enjoyed watching the past come alive before their eyes. |
We must not forget the reason why we were at this beautifully restored historic house in the first place: the paying tour groups. There were something like 12 separate tour groups of people who paid to take a guided two hour historical expedition that included, I believe, seven stops, including the barracks, the southern home, the northern home, the hospital, the southern troops barracks, and a visit with President and Mrs. Lincoln.
I hope you enjoyed this latest edition of our Christmas at the Fort excursion. We plan for it all year long and work on ideas to help raise the period bar. Living history is not as easy as it may seem, for far too many become "Hollywood" and tend to give a performance instead of showing life as lived. There may not be any 'lines' for us to learn in this time-travel practice, but there sure is a whole lot of information one must study while weeding through the myths thought and taught as truth. As I've said, we are not perfect, but I like to think we are on our way to "being there." And for us, that's the fun of it all - trying to be "there."
And that's what it's all about - - if you ain't having fun, why are you even doing it?
Until next time, see you in time.
For more information about Historic Fort Wayne, please click HERE
Information about the feather tree came from Victoriana On-Line Magazine
.
Each year keeps getting better and better! How is that even possible??
ReplyDeleteLovey. Just lovely. I look forward to reading each Christmas post.
ReplyDeleteHi Ken, Another wonderful post. I get so into your posts being back in time that when you showed "the visitors" it was like...whoa, where did those people from the future come from?! I enjoyed reading it all, especially the history of the feather tree.
ReplyDeleteHave a wonderful weekend,
Gina
MERRY CHRISTMAS!!
ReplyDeleteMany Blessings, Linnie