Christmas celebrations usually continue in my household until mid-January.
And why not? We enjoy the holiday and, with January such a dull gray month, it adds a bit of brightness. With 2020 being the year that it was, brightness is welcome.
So there will be one more Christmas posting---coming up next week.
Stay-tuned...
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Welcome to Christmas Past... |
As a kid I always looked forward to watching one of the myriad of filmed versions of Charles Dickens "A Christmas Carol" on TV. In those days before DVDs and VHSs we had no choice but to wait and watch whatever the TV stations scheduled.
No matter, because whichever version they showed I watched intently, and fully engulfed myself in the story, for top hats & bonnets, horses & carriages, and candles & oils lamps epitomized the kind of Christmas I sorely wanted to be a part of. I didn't necessarily dream of a white Christmas as much as I dreamed of finding myself in those earlier Victorian days, moving about the gas-lit brick or cobblestone streets and hearing carolers or even a loan fiddler performing "God Rest You Merry Gentlemen" or "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" echoing somewhere in the distance.
That was what I was dreaming about.
But when one was a teenager back in the 1970s, it was just that - a dream.
When I met the girl who would one day become my wife, I told her of this Christmas fantasy I had. Believe it or not, she loved my idea. We just didn't know how to make it a reality.
It was during the Holiday Season of 1983 when I began making my first attempt to experience an old-time Christmas by taking my date to Greenfield Village for their evening program, which at that time consisted of a horse & carriage ride out to the 1831 Eagle Tavern (presented as 1850), being greeted by top hat-and-bonnet-wearing presenters, dining on a scrumptious repast of cornish hen, vegetables, desserts, & hot cider on candle lit tables, and enjoying period carols as performed by a string band. Then, when it had all ended, we walked along a lantern-lit pathway back to the village gatehouse (now the ticket building). The current Holiday Nights event was not even a glimmer in the eye of Greenfield Village at that time. In fact, aside from the Tavern festivities and the lantern walk back, there was no other nighttime Christmas function there whatsoever (though they did have their daytime Christmas activities back then).
But that night's evening program was enough to fill us with the old-time Christmas spirit like we'd not felt before. My dream of celebrating this festive time of the year, in the way I desperately wanted to do, was finally coming to pass, and this magical night at Greenfield Village's Eagle Tavern was the initial catalyst of all of my old-time Christmas's yet-to-come. And here in the 21st century my wife and I not only continue to visit Greenfield Village during the holidays, which has become a tradition for us, but, having been a living historian for nearly 20 years, I have been able to fulfill my dream of not only witnessing, but participating in Christmas past...
Greenfield Village has over 300 years of history, and each century is represented. The early 20th century comes to life as we move past an 1870s farmhouse. |
The hustle and bustle of the early 1900s is all around. City sidewalks, busy sidewalks... Photograph courtesy of Kristin Wells Browning |
Holiday Nights is truly like a living picture print by Currier and Ives. Photograph courtesy of Kristin Wells Browning |
Over by the courthouse, they're starting to unwind... The Logan County Courthouse from 1840 where Abraham Lincoln once practiced law. Photo courtesy of Kristin Wells Browning |
Continuing on to the far end of the Village, we come to the section known as Porches & Parlors, where the houses of the past sit stately in a row. Our first stop was to the home of John Giddings, built in the mid-18th century in New Hampshire.
A warming fire was blazing near the 1780 McGuffey Cabin - - -
Because guests were not allowed inside the historic buildings, due to covid, our stay was not quite as long as usual, and I did not take nearly as many photographs as I usually do (many thanks to the photographers who allowed me to use a few of their pictures!), though it was still a very fine visit indeed, so I am not complaining.
By the early 1770s, the demand for chocolate in the colonies resulted in the importation of over 320 tons of cocoa beans, which made drinking chocolate affordable to all classes of people and was available in most coffee houses, where colonists would gather to talk about politics and the news of the day. However, if one had the means, such as a man of the stature of shipping merchant John Giddings, one could have afforded to hire a chocolateer, who would make it right there in the kitchen to impress and entertain the guests for a party…perhaps a New Year’s gathering. |
I always have to make a visit to the rural farming home of Samuel and Anna Daggett, built around the same time as the more urban Giddings.
The horse and carriage moves past the silhouette of the Daggett house. |
The night we were at the Village, December 28, was just one day before the moon turned precisely full.
In other words, it was a full moon to the naked human eye.
Photographer Ed Davis saw a beautiful opportunity, as you can see in his picture below:
This is the Cotswold Cottage, which was originally built in England around 1620. I believe it is the oldest of any structure inside Greenfield Village. |
Unfortunately, the door to the early 18th century Plympton House was locked, but that didn't prevent me from getting a couple of pretty cool pictures.
Every picture tells a story...and if there was a story to tell in this picture, it would probably be of me preparing to leave to celebrate New Year's Eve. |
Though there were plenty of illuminations about, it was still a dark evening in December. I always enjoy when my camera can capture the realness of the nighttime. |
A warming fire was blazing near the 1780 McGuffey Cabin - - -
Because guests were not allowed inside the historic buildings, due to covid, our stay was not quite as long as usual, and I did not take nearly as many photographs as I usually do (many thanks to the photographers who allowed me to use a few of their pictures!), though it was still a very fine visit indeed, so I am not complaining.
Alas, however, I had to take my leave of Greenfield Village on that December evening...
It will be my last visit until (God willing) April.
So---my Christmas-past celebrations continue on. I have yet to celebrate Christmas with some of my 1860s reenacting friends this season; yes, that is still on the horizon for a few of us since all of our Christmas reenactments had been cancelled for 2020.
Oh, but I have a few other time-travel experiences planned for the near future as well.
I must say, considering how it all could have turned out for 2020, I have a deep appreciation for the Greenfield Village decision makers deciding to keep the Village open, not just for Holiday Nights, but open in general during this virus-filled year.
As for the future: I gotta feeling '21 is gonna be a good year...
(By the way, before you get on me about not wearing a mask---I was...except for the picture poses)
Until next time, see you in time.
To learn how Christmas was celebrated in Colonial times, click HERE
To learn how New Year's was celebrated in Colonial times, click HERE
To learn how New Year's was celebrated in Colonial times, click HERE
Ten years of Christmas reenacting - colonial and Victorian - click HERE
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Oh my gosh! I haven't been to Greenfield Village since we took a class trip in the early 1980s. Thank you for a trip down memory lane. Although I am sure it has grown since then. I recognized Cotswold Cottage. Someday I will have to get back there (the historian in me is dying to visit again, lol). I haven't been back home since 2016, so hopefully, I can get back soon.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you have, but do you visit the River Rouge site? I want to go there someday too.
A Christmas Carol is such an amazing book. And what's truly amazing is that it is so simple compared to Dickens other works, where the writing is so incredibly sophisticated and extensive that it's somewhat hard to understand. That tells you how insanely skilled Dickens was at writing, because A Christmas Carol was meant to be a light hearted story for the family.
ReplyDeleteI love Christmas. It is a great part of our heritage. God Bless