"Who, and what are you?" Scrooge demanded.
"I am the Ghost of Christmas Past."
"Long Past?" inquired Scrooge: observant of its dwarfish stature.
"No. Your past."
This describes me on December 27.
Earlier in the day I had a "my past" moment with a mini-reunion of a few Deerfield Elementary School classmates. We were able to actually go inside our old school and walk around, reminiscing about those days 50 years ago, even going into our old classrooms.
That was "my " past.
Then that evening I had a "long past " moment when I dressed in my colonial clothing and, with family & friends, went to Holiday Nights at historic Greenfield Village.
The spirits of Christmas Past were with me that day!
.........................................
"Long Past?" inquired Scrooge: observant of its dwarfish stature.
"No. Your past."
This describes me on December 27.
Earlier in the day I had a "my past" moment with a mini-reunion of a few Deerfield Elementary School classmates. We were able to actually go inside our old school and walk around, reminiscing about those days 50 years ago, even going into our old classrooms.
That was "my " past.
Then that evening I had a "long past " moment when I dressed in my colonial clothing and, with family & friends, went to Holiday Nights at historic Greenfield Village.
The spirits of Christmas Past were with me that day!
There were seven of us who joined together this 27th of December - my son and I dressed colonial, our friend Rae mostly dressed colonial, and the rest in modern attire.
Are you ready to go back...?
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.........................................
"It was a long night, if it were only a night, because the Christmas Holidays appeared to be condensed into the space of time they passed together."
~A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens~
Holiday Nights is one of the most spectacular Christmas events - not only in Michigan, but in the nation. It is a celebration of over 200 years of historical Christmas and New Year's observations, from America's colonial period through World War II.
I have been attending Christmas at Greenfield Village since...um...wow---1983! Before they even had a Holiday Nights or anything like it. It was simply an evening of dining at the Eagle Tavern with a lantern walk back to the front gate.
Now here we are, all these years later, with the many changes (including the creation of Holiday Nights itself) and I still enjoy it every bit as much as I ever have.
More, in fact.
So! Won't you join me and my group as we travel through Christmas past? We shall begin at some of the earliest structures at the Village - those from the 18th century - and work our way up to a more modern time.
You can feel the present slipping away as you enter the realm of the past. Long past? Yes. But your past, too... |
Upon entering the gates of Greenfield Village during Holiday Nights, we move quickly to the far end of the Village, where the colonial structures stand. There are virtually no other visitors back there yet, which makes for a fine time to get some scene pictures, such as what we did at our first stop: the home of John Giddings, where a New Year's affair is about to commence.
I was warmly greeted on this New Year's Eve 1760 by one of the Giddings daughters. Visitations was customary to greet the New Year. |
Family and friends would gather to enjoy each other's company, eat food, maybe dance, and play games. |
And here is a three minute video that my wife accidental took while taking pictures.
I'm not sure why I kept it, only that it is three minutes of fun for me:
Don't blink, right?
My son, Rob. This could be 1775, for that is the year his 1st Pennsylvania regimental clothing represents. |
Into the kitchen we go, a room where usually the servants and the mistress of the house would be the only ones to see.
Chocolate was quite the treat for the New Year's celebrations in some households as well. Chocolate remained exclusively a drink until the mid-19th century when advertisements for solid eating chocolate first appeared.
Here, inside the Giddings' kitchen, we see a chocolateer working his craft and explaining the importance and fondness of this treat to the colonists.
The well-to-do Giddings family hired a chocolateer to entertain guests and enjoy the outcome of the process. |
Just look at that chocolate! Roy gave us a step-by-step "tutorial" in the ways of 18th century chocolate making. |
The white mound you see in the foreground is a sugar cone with the sugar nips laying next to it to help make the chocolate a little sweeter. |
The farming Daggett family was our next stop!
Me entering this beautiful 18th century break-back house. It was built roughly around the same time as the Giddings House - 1750 - and is presented as being in the 1760s. |
The glowing fire in the hearth of the great hall gave beauty and warmth, especially with the silhouette of the great wheel, used for spinning, in the foreground. |
This replicated 18th century loom has been inside the Daggett House since November, and now it has been set up and was being used during this special Holiday Nights event. |
It was fascinating to watch Jen at work in the low light of the great hall. Yes, it was a time-travel moment for me. |
The women in many - but not all - of the households of the 18th century produced textiles, especially during the years before daughters married. |
And if there was a loom in the house, the girls might also learn to weave. Weaving gave them a useful skill and also contributed to the household income. |
A flax wheel sits directly behind the loom. |
In the Daggett kitchen:
Artificial light in the 18th century was truly a luxury. Generally, candles were lit only during the nighttime hours, and sparingly so, due to the lengthy candle-making process. It must be remembered that candlemaking was not the fun hobby then as it is in our modern times; it was a backbreaking, smelly, greasy task. The making of the winter's stock of candles was the special autumnal household duty, and a hard one, too, for the large kettles were tiresome and heavy to handle, and the work was well under way at a very early hour, with the temperatures being just cold enough for quick hardening.
Jane and I in the Daggett kitchen. |
The Daggett House is my absolute favorite inside Greenfield Village, and many of my studies on colonial everyday life centers around Samuel, Anna, and their children.
Such a fine Daggett visit!
For this next picture we are entering the year 1800 and find ourselves at the McGuffey Cabin.
This ancient cabin's exterior~ (photo courtesy of Craig Hutchison) |
Alexander McGuffey (aged 30) and his wife, Anna Holmes (aged 21), began their married life in this log home. While living there they had their first three children: Jane (1799), William (1800), and Henry (1802).
Greenfield Village also has the Martha-Mary Chapel.
This non-denominational church design was based on a colonial church from Bradford, Massachusetts. The bricks and the doors came from the building in which Henry Ford and Clara Bryant were married in 1888 - the Bryant family home in old Greenfield Township (from which the Village name was taken).
The bell inside the steeple, according to the 1933 guide book, was cast by the son of Paul Revere. |
Sticking by his original New England village plan, Ford made sure that the steeple of the church was the highest point in Greenfield Village. This is as it was in most towns across America. Once a very religious nation, towns and villages were built around the place of worship, and the buildings of the towns were never taller than the church steeple, therefore, no matter where a townsfolk was at, they could always find the church because of the height of its steeple.
Looking strikingly beautiful in the background at night, this could almost be a scene out of New England instead of Michigan. |
Let's now visit, for a brief time, the home of founding father and the most famous of American lexicographers, Noah Webster.
The Websters were celebrating the coming of the New Year in their new home. |
And they had quite a spread of delicious food a-waiting their guests. |
My son Robbie inside the Webster home, ready to join in the festivities. |
Also beautifully lit is the Eagle Tavern, built in 1831 and presented as 1850.
Are these the shadows of things that have been or may be? |
Yes, it is a, more or less, point & shoot.
That being said, I will be retaking many previous poses for better quality, such as the one you see below.
One of the things I learned while researching the old taverns
(while writing THIS posting) is that clothing fashions might have changed over time, but the basic look and layout of most taverns changed little from the mid-18th century through much of the 19th century.
That's why this picture works.
|
Rae Bucher is a friend who joined us on this Christmas past excursion. She also does Civil War era and Regency.
Tonight she was colonial with a modern sense of warmth!
My friend Rae and I. |
Moving ahead, we find ourselves in front of the Logan County Courthouse.
Wanting a building that was associated with our 16th President Abraham Lincoln to add to his Greenfield Village, Henry Ford found a forgotten and dilapidated structure that was, in 1929, being used as a private residence.
The stark light and dark contrast is beautiful at the front door of the courthouse. |
Inside the 1840 Logan County Courthouse. |
Now let's jump up a few years, to the year 1860, to the plantation house belonging to the Carroll family.
Henry and Elizabeth Carroll and their family built their house in the mid-1830's, where it sat upon 700 acres of land. They enjoyed a prosperous life, including hosting extravagant parties.
They had five children.
The Susquehanna Plantation (photo courtesy of Bob Jacobs) |
The Carroll family was one of the wealthiest in St. Mary's County - the slaves alone, according to the 1860 census, were valued at $49,000. Among the slaves were skilled craftsmen, including blacksmiths, carpenters, coopers, shoemakers, and seamstresses.
And the house servants.
Madelyn Porter, who won a Kresge Artist Award for her work telling stories, portrayed one of the Carroll slaves - one who worked in the kitchen. Folks, this woman's presentation was simply amazing. |
The way she spoke as she told her stories as a slave at the Carroll Home just drew me/us into her world, making me feel as if I were there, back in Christmas 1860. |
"She was spell binding!"
"Gave me chills."
"She gave a really stunning performance."
"She is amazing!!"
"She was awesome!!!"
"She was fabulous, all but made me cry!"
"She was definitely my favorite!"
I concur with each of these comments.
Don't believe us?
Well, someone took a video of her presentation:
The Carroll wedding table is all set to go. |
Walking to the Burbank House:
Though built in 1800, it is not really utilized as such. Instead it is used for special activities, as you see here: (Photo by Kestrel Bird) |
A couple of ladies, who happen to be friends of mine (and Civil War reenactors), were painting catalogue drawings. |
Amanda works her art. |
Why, look below at an original from the 19th century:
Here is an original fashion book plate. Maybe their painted pictures will show up in one! |
Of course, the Civil War began in 1861 - -
Here are a couple of Civil War soldiers in their winter quarters, enjoying the warmth of a December bonfire. |
From the Civil War we'll move into the future a bit to 1876.
See the house there on the left? Why, that is the birthplace of Henry Ford, the founder of Ford Motor Company, the maker of the Model T, and the founder of Greenfield Village. |
Here is Ian in his new role as Ford's Lawn Jockey. |
A centennial Christmas celebration was held inside the Ford Home, commemorating the 100th birthday of the United States of America. (Picture courtesy of Erin Connors) |
The young lady here was very animated in her explanations about the food spread out on the table. |
And, still, cookies were being baked in the cast iron stove in the kitchen. |
From here we will turn another century:
Welcome to 1903, the year that Orville and Wilbur Wright created the first heavier-than-air motorized aeroplane. And it was built inside the building adjacent to the brightly lit one.
Now we are going into 1915. But we are also in Canada, visiting at the homestead that once belonged to the grandparents of Thomas Edison.
Okay, so we're really not in Canada, but that's where this home was originally built.
As soon as you step into the Edison cottage, you are greeted by this wonderfully festive Christmas decor. Yes, that is an actual feather tree in the middle of the table. |
Goose was the meal of the day, and just as the sight of Christmas grabs you when you walk in, so does the scent of this bird cooking in the cast iron stove in the kitchen. |
From Canada we will make our way to Merry Old England where we find a World War II Hospitality Station over at the Cotswold House.
Though the British were not too hospitable to this colonial! (Just kidding - - these are some great guys!) |
The young ladies from the Red Cross were specially trained in what to say, how to act, and how to help the men through their loneliness in all ways but, shall we say, intimacy. |
And the Christmas tree would be decorated as festively as the one in their own living rooms back home. |
And we waved our goodbyes, only to look toward Christmas future. |
Now before we end out this week's posting - the first post of the '20s - I thought I would show you a little of Christmas 2019 at my own home, which is firmly rooted in the past, though with a bit of contemporary thrown in.
Which past?
Take your pick - from the 18th century through the 21st.
It's a sort of mish-mosh.
It makes it easier all around and it is every bit as festive.
Our fireplace mantel with the sugar cone & sugar nips, old St. Nicholas, and the anti-Stamp Act teapot. |
And my family setting down for our Christmas feast. My grandkids are now sitting at a different table - the kids table, so they did not make it into this picture (unfortunately). |
This has been the most up and down Christmas season I have ever had, with that horrible virus/flu bug knocking down sections of my family and my Christmas tree falling over and a weekend cancelation for Simply Dickens performing at the Holly Dickens Festival. However, from mid-December onward, it just got better and better. So many highs over-shadowed those few lows, you know? What helps is that our holiday celebration is not based in and around the commercialism of buy buy buy, but rather, of family and do do do---do something fun; experience the season rather than the malls.
And for a historian, Holiday Nights is one of the best ways to experience the season, in all its many glories.
Speaking of many glories - - - -
You may think, now that it is New Year's, that the Christmastide is over.
Not so fast!
There is still the 21st Michigan Civil War-era Christmas party and the Citizens of the American Colonies Revolutionary War-era Christmas party to attend. And if you so desire, you will read about each right here at Passion for the Past in the next two blog postings.
So, until next time, see you in time.
To read more about a colonial Christmas, please click HERE
To read more about a colonial New Year's, please click HERE
To read more about how we experienced a full immersion Victorian Christmas, please click HERE
~ ~ ~
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