In the fifties
Christmas was a very important event in our
lives. Christmas was the holiday that kids looked forward
to all year long. Back then, most kids believed Santa
did check his list to see if they had been naughty or
nice! Of course, our behavior was beyond reproach as
Christmas drew nearer.
Remember helping your
moms bake Christmas cookies? As we listened to Christmas
songs on the radio, we spent hours decorating those
cookies. When we were finished, we just knew they were
the most beautiful masterpieces ever created! Many
can still have memories of our moms in the kitchen with their
Christmas aprons on.
How many of you
remember going with your parents to pick out the Christmas
tree? We spent a long time picking out the perfect
tree and then drove home with the tree on top of our parents'
cars. With many families, singing Christmas carols at
the top of their lungs as they drove home with the tree
became an annual tradition.
Decorating our
Christmas tree was a family tradition back in the 50's. Most
of our Christmas Trees were decorated with Shiny Brite glass
ornaments. They were relatively inexpensive ornaments
and affordable for most families. Plastic ornaments became
very popular during the 50s. Many families preferred
plastic ornaments as they were very cheap and of course more
durable than the glass ornaments. And don't forget the
tinsel we so carefully placed on our trees. However, the star
was the all important ornament on our trees! Once the
star was placed on the top of the tree and the lights were
turned on, many familes gathered around the tree and sang
Christmas carols together. In 1946, Noma began selling
bubble lights which became the most popular lights Noma had
ever sold. As kids, many of us would sit for hours and
admire those bubble lights on our trees. And how could we
forget when the aluminum Christmas trees with rotating color
wheels became the rage in 1959? And, remember using
flashlights to find our way to the fuse box to replace yet
another blown fuse?
Some families
decorated their trees with homemade ornaments. Kids
would string popcorn or cranberries on long strings to drape
around the trees. At school we made homemade decorations
to take home and put on our trees. How many of you
remember making paper snow flakes that we thought were
absolutely beautiful? And of course, there were the
garlands we made out of colored construction paper and placed
on our trees. But, the most remembered gifts are the
ones we made for our parents at school! We worked really
hard on those presents and could hardly wait for them to be
opened.
Remember how we would sit down on the floor with our
Christmas stockings that Santa had filled? Our stockings
were generally filled with an apple, an orange, a banana and
various kinds of nuts. Sometimes our stockings even
contained a candy cane and other small treasures. And
yes, believe it or not, some kids really were worried their
stocking may have nothing but a lump of coal in
it.
Think back to
Christmas time in the 50s. Do you remember participating
in church and school plays? It was with great
expectations we hoped to be chosen as Mary or Joseph in our
church's Christmas Pagent. But even if we were chosen to
be Wisemen or Shepherds, we remained enthusiastic. Our parents
proudly set in the audience with their Brownie Hawkeye
cameras snapping pictures of us. Those school and church plays
were a family event that the entire family looked forward
to.
How many of you remember going
from house to house singing Christmas carols outside on the
porches? Often times, our church and school music
directors would take us to homes of elderly shut-ins. We
brought smiles to their withered faces as we sang the carols
together. They didn't care if we were off tune or
forgot the lyrics because we had brought some much needed
Christmas cheer into their lives!
The Night Before Christmas was
written by Clement Moore on Christmas Eve in 1822. It
was first published in 1823 and continues to remain an all
time favorite Christmas poem. In many families it was a
tradition for our dads or grandfathers to read that book to
all the kids in the family before they went to bed.
Before most us went to bed, we left cookies and milk for Santa
to enjoy before he went up the chimney to take off for
the next house. Some kids left Santa letters telling him
how good they had been and what they wanted for
Christmas.
When our parents finally were able to get us
off to bed, we often tried to stay awake to hear
Santa and his reindeer on our roofs. From pure
exhaustion, we fell fast asleep dreaming of all the
things on our Christmas lists. How we hoped Santa would
bring us just one of our most wanted toys.
And for those of us kids who
lived in Nebraska there was only one thing left that made our
Christmas absolutely perfect - snow! If only it would
snow, we could build snowmen and snow forts, have snow ball
fights with our friends and even go sledding! How many
of you remember going to bed on Christmas Eve and praying for
snow? Was there anything more beautiful than fresh
fallen snow on our trees and houses?
Oh, the Christmas memories we carry in our
hearts! They are cherished memories that can never be
taken away from us! Weren't the fifties a fabulous time
to celebrate Christmas?
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