Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

24 December 2018

Christmas ‘42



By BILL MILLER

For the Mail Tribune
Christmas was just around the corner and the war news was still not good. The country was entering into its second year of combat and the patriotic folks at home were still proudly struggling with their own war efforts. There were no new cars to buy, no nylon stockings to wear. Tires and gasoline were rationed. Even a morning cup of coffee required a war ration book.
It was one sacrifice after another. When the government banned sliced bread, the Fluhrer Bakery ran newspaper advertisements explaining how to safely slice bread—“Lay the loaf on its side, bottom toward you. Hold it firmly, use a sharp knife, and long, easy strokes.”
Clocks stayed on daylight savings time to save energy, and restaurants began “Meatless Tuesday” so the boys overseas would have enough to eat. Shoes were rationed to one pair each year and Oregon’s weekly liquor allotment was cut from a quart to a pint.
No matter how bad it got, few people complained. After all, what were their troubles compared to those of a tank soldier in the African desert or a Marine on a Pacific island beach?
Five miles north of Medford a new military city had appeared—a training center named Camp White. The camp was about to celebrate it’s first Christmas, and most of the men would spend their holiday alone. That was unacceptable to community leaders who announced their intention to “bring gaiety and good cheer to our adopted sons. Let’s make Christmas a joyous day for every Camp White serviceman.”
Families invited soldiers to Christmas dinner. “Older girls and women, and especially mothers,” were asked to become hostesses at the local USO club. The ladies were assured that these social functions were well “controlled” and that it wasn’t necessary for volunteers to know how to dance.
Christmas 1942
By Christmas day, service clubs had helped soldiers wrap over 3,000 packages for the folks back home. Postal workers labored in 12-hour shifts to keep the mail flowing.
Medford musicians donated instruments to a servicemen’s makeshift band. Just in time for the holiday, they got everything they needed.
The artillery barrage on the Camp White practice range stopped at exactly five o’clock on Christmas Eve. The guns would be silent through the holiday and resume operations the following day.
Santa Claus was everywhere, but nowhere was the genial fat man more appreciated than in the camp’s hospital. Behind the white wig and whiskers, everyone recognized 1st Sergeant Henry Putnam, but carried on with make believe surprise and wonder. At the “Kiddies Christmas Party” Santa even brought along one of his reindeer—Susie, a toy-carrying fawn adopted by the engineer’s battalion.
A choir from the local Episcopal Church sang Christmas carols and the band played a few selections on their newly borrowed instruments, while a magician worked his magic.
On Saturday, December 26, 1942, the world went back to wartime normal. Artillery shells whistled northward on the practice range, boots marched over the parade field, and engineers practiced bridge building on the Rogue River. Civilians returned to work and rationing.
Another Christmas would come and go before Americans landed in Europe. For nearly three more years soldiers would die.
On the home front, they would carry on no matter how long it took—one  sacrifice after another. And, if they were very, very lucky, Santa would bring them the gift they all wanted most—Peace on Christmas Day.
Writer Bill Miller is the author of “History Snoopin’,”a collection of his previous history columns and stories. Reach him at newsmiller@live.com or WilliamMMiller.com.

20 December 2018

Deck the Halls! - but before Halloween?


Deck the halls
By BILL MILLER
For the Mail Tribune
Remember when the Christmas season began the day after Thanksgiving?
I can still see Dad, his tummy full of turkey and stuffing, reaching high into the closet and pulling down boxes of Christmas decorations. For Dad, there was a time for everything, and the time for Christmas was the day after Thanksgiving, and not one day before.
Christmas Joy
Those were the days when it was pretty rare to see even a garland or two in a department store before Turkey Day. Most merchants, like us, had the patience to wait.
In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, at the urging of retailers, proclaimed that Thanksgiving would be celebrated one week earlier than normal. Traditionally the holiday had always fallen on the last Thursday of November, which meant in 1939 there would only have been 24 shopping days before Christmas.
FDR hoped to spur the economy out of the Great Depression with an extra week of Christmas shopping, but what he actually spurred, was an angry uprising of Americans who didn’t like their traditions fiddled with.
Everyone’s calendar was wrong. Schools had to reschedule holidays and football games. Then there were those who said the President had no legal or moral right to make the change. The mayor of Atlantic City went so far as to sarcastically rename the holiday, “Franksgiving.”
Eventually, a joint resolution in Congress set the 4th Thursday in November as the official Thanksgiving Day.
Christmas Morn
Even so, over the last few decades, we’ve watched Christmas begin to appear earlier and earlier in the year. We used to joke about Christmas decorations in department stores before Thanksgiving. Now, we’re able to pick up a string of colorful Christmas lights days before we can even find a Halloween pumpkin.
Christmas in the Rogue Valley during the 1800s was simple and unpretentious; muddy streets and a few hand written signs in shop windows. There were no twinkling red and green street lights or even a community Christmas tree. It was a time when merchants like A. A. Davis, the “Flour King of the Valley,” delivered a sack of his best flour to every needy family in town.
Schools put on Christmas plays and churches gathered their members together in religious services, but decorations outside of the home were few and far between. The days before Christmas  were a time to stay home, in the warmth and comfort of family and friends.
On Christmas morning, a few simple gifts might be exchanged around a candle-lit tree, and then it was off to church, wearing those special “go to meeting” clothes.
Then, around the beginning of the 20th Century, things began to change. Electricity came to the Rogue Valley, inspiring a few merchants to place a colored light or two in their window to highlight a new phenomenon – the “Christmas Sale.”
Christmas Shopping
“Santa Claus has unloaded his bag at our store,” said George Webb, owner of an emporium he called, “The Racket Store.” In Ashland, the holiday merchandise was a bit heavier. “What is more appropriate for Christmas than a Piano or an Organ to give your wife or daughter?” asked Howard Coss, of the Coss Piano House.
Tinsel and flashing lights began to appear all over town and each succeeding year brought more lights, more Santas, and more fun. We were well on our way to Christmas in October and enjoying every minute of it.
May this Christmas bring to you and yours the spirit of childhood’s happy laughter.

Writer Bill Miller is the author of “History Snoopin’,”a collection of his previous history columns and stories. Reach him at newsmiller@live.com or WilliamMMiller.com.

Christmas 1918

War is Over

Peace on Earth






 Merry Christmas!


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