Introduction
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Harper's Weekly depicts a family separated by war in its January 3,
1863 edition. |
For a nation torn by civil war, Christmas in the 1860s was observed with
conflicting emotions. Nineteenth-century Americans embraced Christmas
with all the Victorian trappings that had moved the holiday from the
private and religious realm to a public celebration. Christmas cards
were in vogue, carol singing was common in public venues, and greenery
festooned communities north and south. Christmas trees stood in places
of honor in many homes, and a mirthful poem about the jolly old elf who
delivered toys to well-behaved children captivated Americans on both
sides of the Mason-Dixon line.
But Christmas also made the heartache for lost loved ones more acute.
As the Civil War dragged on, deprivation replaced bounteous repasts and
familiar faces were missing from the family dinner table. Soldiers used to
"bringing in the tree" and caroling in church were instead scavenging
for firewood and singing drinking songs around the campfire. And so
the holiday celebration most associated with family and home was a
contradiction. It was a joyful, sad, religious, boisterous, and subdued
event.
Before the war
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"The Christmas Tree" by F. A. Chapman. |
Many of the holiday customs we associate with Christmas today were
familiar to 1840s celebrants. Christmas cards were popularized that decade
and Christmas trees were a stylish addition to the parlor. By the 1850s,
Americans were singing "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear," "Oh Little Town of
Bethlehem," and "Away in a Manger" in public settings. In 1850 and 1860,
Godey's Lady's Book featured Queen Victoria's tabletop Christmas
tree, placed there by her German husband Prince Albert. Closer to home,
in December, 1853, Robert E. Lee's daughter recorded in her diary that
her father - then superintendent at West Point - possessed an evergreen
tree decorated with dried and sugared fruit, popcorn, ribbon, spun glass
ornaments, and silver foil.
Clement Clarke Moore, a religious scholar who for decades was
too embarrassed to claim authorship of the 1822 poem, "A Visit From
St. Nicholas," was now well-known for his tribute to Santa Claus. "Santa
Claus" made his first public appearance in a Philadelphia department
store in 1849, marking the advent of holiday commercialism.
For enslaved African Americans, the Christmas season often meant a
mighty bustle of cooking, housekeeping, and other chores. "Reward"
for these efforts was a suspension of duties for a day or two and the
opportunity for singing, dancing, and possible brief reunions with
separated family members. Further gestures of "goodwill" by masters
who saw themselves as benevolent owners were small and the semi-annual
clothing allotment.
By 1860, many worried about civil unrest, fearful this Christmas would
be the last before the outbreak of war. An Arkansas diarist writes:
"Christmas has come around in the circle of time, but is not a day
of rejoicing. Some of the usual ceremonies are going on, but there is
gloom on the thoughts and countenances of all the better portion of
our people."
1861
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Men of the 5th New Hampshire engaged in a hilarious
greased pig chase as their Christmas entertainment.
From Frank Leslie's Illustrated History of the Civil
War.
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Events proceeded quickly in 1861, hastening war. Abraham Lincoln became
the 16th president of the United States in March and the bombardment
of Fort Sumter occurred in April. Southern states seceded and the
Confederates claimed their first major victory at the first battle of
Manassas. For the shopkeeper or farm boy or student away from home for
Christmas the first time, melancholy set in.
Robert Gould Shaw, then a 2nd lieutenant in the 2d Massachusetts
Infantry, writes about guard duty near Frederick, MD. He would later
earn fame as the commander of the heroic African American unit, the
54th Massachusetts.
"It is Christmas morning and I hope a happy and merry one for you
all, though it looks so stormy for our poor country, one can hardly be
in merry humor."
James Holloway, writing from Dranesville, VA tells his family that
Christmas:
"You have no idea how lonesome I feel this day. It's the first time
in my life I'm away from loved ones at home."
On the civilian front, Sallie Brock Putnam describes Christmas, 1861 in
Richmond, VA.
"Never before had so sad a Christmas dawned upon us. Our religious
services were not remitted and the Christmas dinner was plenteous of
old; but in nothing did it remind us of days gone by. We had neither
the heart nor inclination to make the week merry with joyousness when
such a sad calamity hovered over us."
Yet Christmas 1861 also saw soldiers full of bravado, still relatively
well fed and equipped, and eagerly anticipating Christmas boxes of treats
from home. Often officers authorized extra rations of spirits and men
engaged in greased pig-catching contests, footraces, jumping matches,
and impromptu pageants dressed as women. Soldiers erected small evergreen
trees strung with hardtack and pork. Some were excused from drills,
although other references point to the need to haul logs and forage for
firewood no matter what day of the year it was.
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Artist Winslow Homer depicts soldiers' joy at receiving holiday boxes
from home in this 1861 Harper's Weekly illustration.
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1862
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By Christmas, 1862, Thomas Nast had allied Santa Claus with the Union
Army. From Harper's Weekly, January 3, 1863.
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This sad year brought forth the war's impact full force with battles at
Shiloh, Manassas, and Antietam, and campaigns in the Shenandoah Valley
and the Peninsula. Many Fredericksburg, Virginia citizens were homeless
or fled their town just prior to Christmas.
Harper's Weekly illustrator Thomas Nast, a staunch Unionist,
is now depicting Santa Claus entertaining Federal soldiers by showing
them Jefferson Davis with a cord around his neck. Abraham Lincoln would
later refer to a politicized Santa as "the best recruiting sergeant the
North ever had." More moderate illustrations show soldiers decorating
camps with greens and firing salutes to Santa. Ironically, it was Nast
who fixed Santa's home and toy workshop address at the "North Pole"
"so no nation can claim him as their own."
Officers of the 20th Tennessee gave their men a barrel of whisky to
mark the day. "We had many a drunken fight and knock-down before the
day closed," wrote one participant. But there were other more somber
occurrences recorded for Christmas 1862. One account tells of soldiers
being forced to witness an execution for desertion and another grim
letter describes how men firing their weapons in a funeral salute were
mistakenly punished for unauthorized holiday merrymaking.
1863
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Children still found Christmas morning joyful in this 1864 Harper's
Weekly edition. Note that the youngster on the right is equipped
with sword, drum, kepi and a haversack with "U.S." prominently
displayed.
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This year saw the battles of Gettysburg and Vickburg and the beginning
of the end for the Confederacy. Thomas Nast portrayed Santa Claus in
a patriotic uniform, distributing to Yankee soldiers to raise their
morale. Southern parents were gently preparing their children that
Santa Claus may not "make it through the blockade" to deliver presents
this year. Harper's Weekly depicted a tender reunion scene of
a soldier husband and father briefly reunited with his family during
furlough.
Holiday boxes and barrels from home containing food, clothing
and small articles of comfort were highly anticipated by soldier
recipients. Depending on their duty assignment, Christmas dinner may
have consisted of only crackers, hard tack, rice, beans and a casting of
lots for a single piece of beef too small to divide. Those lucky enough
to receive boxes from home could supplement a meager meal with turkey,
oysters, potatoes, ham, cabbage, eggnog, cranberries and fruitcake.
One of the dreariest accounts of Christmas during the Civil War came
from Lt. Col. Frederic Cavada, captured at Gettysburg and writing about
Christmas 1863 in Libby Prison in Richmond:
"The north wind comes reeling in fitful gushes through the iron bars,
and jingles a sleighbell in the prisoner's ear, and puffs in his pale
face with a breath suggestively odorous of eggnog."
Cavada continued:
"Christmas Day! A day which was made for smiles, not sighs - for
laughter, not tears - for the hearth, not prison."
He described a makeshift dinner set on a tea towel-covered box. Each
prisoner brought his own knife and fork and drank "Eau de James" (water
from the nearby James River.) Cavada reported he combed his hair for the
occasion and further related that the prisoners staged a "ball" with a
"great eal of bad dancing" during which hats were crushed and trousers
torn. Sentries called "lights out" at 9 p.m.
1864
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General William Tecumseh Sherman is host at a celebratory Christmas dinner
in Savannah after presenting the captured city to President Lincoln as
a holiday.
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The final
wartime Christmas came as the Confederacy floundered, Lee's Army
behind entrenchments in Petersburg and Richmond. Abraham Lincoln
received a most unusual holiday - the city of Savannah, GA -
presented by General William Tecumseh Sherman via telegram. Union
and Confederate sympathizers were hoping this Christmas would be
the last at conflict.
Johnny
Green, of the 4th Kentucky's Orphan Brigade, expressed this
sentiment:
"Peace on Earth, Good will to men should prevail.
We certainly would preserve the peace if they would go home and
let us alone..."
Green
further reports he and his comrades received an unexpected and
very welcome holiday:
"Our commissary sends word for each Orderly
Sergeant to come to his wagon & he will issue one piece of
soap to each man. This is indeed good news. Since the Skirmish
began at Stockbridge Nov 15 we have not had a chance to wash
any more than our faces occasionall & never our feet or
bodies until now...."
Holiday
season charity was not forgotten this year. On Christmas Day, 90
Michigan men and their captain loaded up wagons with food and
supplies and distributed them to destitute civilians in the
Georgia countryside. The Union "Santa Clauses" tied tree branches
to the heads of the mule teams to resemble reindeer.
Many other
units, however, were on the march, either trying to evade capture
or pursuing the opponent for better position. Soldiers left in
the squalid conditions of prison camps spent the day remembering
holidays at home, as did others in slightly more comfortable
settings. Confederate General Gordon, writing from his
headquarters near Petersburg, wrote of fighting famine as well as
General Grant:
"The one worn-out railroad running to the far
South could not bring us half enough necessary supplies: and
even if it could have transported Christmas boxes of good
things, the people at home were too depleted to send
them."
His wife,
who was with him at headquarters, presented him with a most
precious treat for Christmas 1864 - "real" coffee brought from
home 'to celebrate our victories in the first years and to
sustain us in defeat at the last.'
Moods were
more bouyant in Washington and New York, where celebrants supped
on substantial feasts and attended the theatre.
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"Snowy Morning on Picket" from Harper's
Weekly January 30, 1864.
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After the war
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Thomas Nast's most famous image of Santa Claus
was published in Harper's Weekly on January 1,
1881.
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The events of
1865 again influenced holiday celebrations. President Lincoln's
assassination shocked the nation, but by mid-summer, the
conspirators were hung or imprisoned for lengthy terms. War was
ended and many soldiers had been mustered out of service. The
13th Amendment to the Constitution became law on December 18,
1865, abolishing the institution of slavery. Soldiers and
civilians alike were ready to reunite with their families and
again embrace Victorian holiday customs.
At the end
of hostilities, commerce once again flowed southward, and goods
filled Northern shops. Long-held holiday traditions were
re-introduced, as ornamental greens and trees filled the markets
and toys and other items went on display. Newspaper illustrations
were of domestic and wintry scenes.
The final
verse of a poem By the Christmas Hearth published in the
Christmas edition of Harper's Weekly reflected the
sentiments of many:
Bring holly,
rich with berries red,
And bring the sacred mistletoe;
Fill high each glass, and let hearts
With kindliest feelings flow;
So sweet it seems at home once more
To sit with those we hold most dear,
And keep absence once again
To keep the Merry Christmas here.
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