The decorated Christmas tree can be traced back to the ancient Romans who
during their winter festival decorated trees with small pieces of metal during
Saturnalia, a winter festival in honor of Saturnus, the god of agriculture.
An evergreen, the Paradise tree, was decorated with apples as a symbol of the
feast of Adam and Eve held on December 24th during the middle ages.
Christmas trees were sold in Alsace in 1531. Alsace was at that time a part of
Germany. Today it is part of France. The trees were sold at local markets and
set up in homes undecorated.
In the Ammerschweier in Alsace there was an ordinance that stated no person
"shall have for Christmas more than one bush of more than eight shoe lengths."
Sixteenth century folklore credited Martin Luther as being the first to decorate
an indoor tree. After a walk through a forest of evergreens with shining stars
overhead, Luther tried to describe the experience to his family and showed them
by bringing a tree into their home and decorating it with candles. Some
historians state that the first evidence of a lighted tree appeared more than a
century after Martin Luther's death in 1546.
The oldest record of a decorated Christmas tree came from a 1605 diary found in
Strasburg, France (Germany in 1605). The tree was decorated with paper roses,
apples and candies.
In Austria & Germany during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the tops
of evergreens were cut and hung upside down in a living room corner. They were
decorated with apples, nuts and strips of red paper.
The first record of Christmas trees in America was for children in the German
Moravian Church's settlement in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, Christmas 1747. Actual
trees were not decorated, but wooden pyramids covered with evergreen branches
were decorated with candles.
The custom of the Christmas tree was introduced in the United States during the
War of Independence by Hessian troops. An early account tells of a Christmas
tree set up by American soldiers at Fort Dearborn, Illinois, the site of
Chicago, in 1804. Most other early accounts in the United States were among the
German settlers in eastern Pennsylvania.
In 1834, Queen Victoria's husband, Prince Albert, was credited with bringing the
first Christmas tree to Windsor Castle for the Royal Family. Some historians
state that in actuality Queen Charlotte, Victoria's grandmother, recalled that a
Christmas tree was in the Queen's lodge at Windsor on Christmas Day in 1800.
Charles Minnegrode introduced the custom of decorating trees in Williamsburg,
Virginia in 1842.
By 1850, the Christmas tree had become fashionable in the eastern states. Until
this time, it had been considered a quaint foreign custom.
Mark Carr brought trees from the Catskills to the streets of New York in 1851,
and opened the first retail Christmas tree lot in the United States.
Franklin Pierce was the first president to introduce the Christmas tree to the
White House in 1856 for a group of Washington Sunday School children. The first
national Christmas Tree was lighted in the year 1923 on the White House lawn by
President Calvin Coolidge
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