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You know Dasher and Dancer and Prancer and Vixen … but do you know the origins of eggnog? Of"Silent Night"? OfSanta Claushimself?
Brian Earl does. The Silicon Valley resident has hosted the popularChristmas Pastpodcastsince 2018,telling delicious talesof the meanings behindChristmastraditions to a worldwide audience.
In 2022, Earlreleased a book of the same name, which expands upon all the bite-sized stories shared on his podcast. Here are five fun Christmas facts gleaned from the volume.
1. Fruitcake dates back to the Romans
InChristmas Past,Earl discusses the origins ofthe love-it-or-hate-it holiday treat, explaining it was first conceived as almost an “energy bar” for Roman soldiers heading into battle, consisting of barley mash, pomegranate seeds, raisins and pine nuts, formed into a cake shape.
2. The first store Santa Claus appeared in 1890
Though many may associatein-store Santas with Macy’sandMiracle on 34th Street,it was James Edgar, owner of Edgar’s Department store in Brockton, Mass., who “began making appearances in his store dressed as Santa starting in 1890,” Earl writes.
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Earl dedicates a chapter toChristmas lights, recounting how people would illuminate trees with candles — a tradition some credit to Martin Luther, but, in reality, started nearly a century after his death, closer to the 1600s.
Earl cites an 1896Good Housekeepingarticle that instructs readers to “have a bucket of water and a sponge fastened to a stick of sufficient length to reach the top of the tree near at hand, in order to extinguish any flame which may arise.”
In fact, Christmas tree fires were so common that some insurers wouldn’t cover them.
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In 1917, two brothers running a stationery store in Kansas City ran out of the tissue paper used to wrap gifts. In looking for a quick substitute, one brother grabbed some of the “brightly colored paper sheets imported from France that they had planned on using as the inner linings of their envelopes,” Earl writes. “He priced the sheets at 10 cents a pop, and the stuff just flew off the shelves.”
Earl traces the history of the snow globe to Austrian man Erwin Perzy, who created and sold surgical instruments. In trying to make a better lightbulb for operating rooms, Perzy crushed glass into a “fine glitter,” Earl writes, “creating thousands and thousands of tiny reflectors” in a globe full of water made to amplify light.
For fun, he put some semolina in a globe of water and noticed it looked like snow. He eventually gifted a friend one of these water-filled glass globes with semolina and a tiny church he hand-carved, and the snow globe was born.
The modern Perzy family now runs the Original Viennese Snowglobe company — and the process used for making their snow is a closely guarded family secret.
“There are some tricks you need to use,” Edwin Perzy III told Earl. “I have a special machine for the production of the snow, and this machine is not in my factory. It’s in my private house.”
source: people.com