A Civil War Christmas
It was Christmas Day in 1860 and Lincoln, newly elected
president but yet to be inaugurated, was at home in his reception room in
Springfield, Illinois. The town was busy. Christmas was not a public holiday.
He was trying to cope with a mountain of mail and a constant flow of visitors
who were mostly there for their own interests rather than his. South Carolina
had seceded five days ago. Civil War loomed, although the first shot wouldn’t
be fired until the spring.
Amongst the gifts he received from complete strangers this
day, was a whistle fashioned from a pig-tail. The sender claimed he’d crafted
it just to show it was possible. I can imagine it appealing to Lincoln’s earthy
sense of humour. It probably got more attention from him than his more
expensive gifts.
The four Christmases to follow would all be in wartime and
every one of them would see fighting. Lincoln would be dead before the next
peaceful Christmas, along with around 650,000 other Americans, North and South.
The war to come would change many things, including
Christmas. For decades, even centuries, before the war, European Yuletide
traditions had poured into America along with variant nationalities and
religions. American practices at Christmas largely paralleled those in Europe.
In the same way they followed hat styles in Paris, they adopted
Victorian/Germanic fashions in Christmas trees, decorations and cards. Being
American, they added a flare for commercialism that left Christmas never quite
the same again.
To understand the wartime development of Christmas, you need
to consider how the Civil War more widely shaped American identity. What it
means to be American has never truly been a constant. It didn’t arrive fully
formed with the Declaration of Independence. At the outbreak of war, America
was just eighty-five years old. In those years it had never stopped changing
and reaching westward, a constant flow of immigrants stirring the pot. Now here
was its greatest crisis, a civil war, where the question of what it meant to be
American, what the Union represented
was a matter of life and death. And here were men and, to a lesser extent,
women, thrown together in great armies: English, Scots, Welsh and Irish, German
speakers, the Dutch, eastern Europeans; all away from home and all lonely. Any
commonality in Christmas traditions really mattered. It helped comfort them but
it also gave them a seasonal rallying point in terms of what it meant to be
American. The Civil War re-asserted and to some extent reconstructed America.
Christmas traditions were a brick in that reconstruction.
You’ll want some proof. Here goes. The first depiction of
Santa Claus, as we might recognise him today, dates from the Civil War. It’s
true. During his campaign for president, Lincoln hired an illustrator to
produce his posters. The artist was called Thomas Nast and, late in 1862, he
was asked by one of the most popular periodicals of the time, Harper’s Weekly,
to produce their Christmas cover. Knowing Nast as he did, Lincoln himself is
rumoured to have proposed the idea of Santa Claus visiting Union troops.
Santa Claus appears in the stars and stripes, but he is the
same white-bearded, rotund, non-chimney-shaped old fellow that we see in
shopping centre grottos to this day. The genius of the image was that it mixed
tradition with patriotism at a time the Union war effort was at a low ebb. The
cover was so popular that Nast got repeat commissions from Harper’s Weekly for
many Christmases to come.
Christmas on the frontline wasn’t quite as joyous as Mr Nast
was implying. A Union army was camped to the south-east of Nashville. A Confederate
army was close; just a little way down the road to Chattanooga. Battle might
come soon. The weather had been clear and mild but Christmas Day it was
overcast.
Santa Claus, represented by the postal service, turned up
for some, usually with food parcels rather than presents, but many would get
nothing at all. Peter Cozzens, in his wonderful trilogy on the Chattanooga
Campaign, describes a festive season for the officers, especially the
Confederates, as they were on home turf and supported by the local citizenry.
Elaborate balls were held, the halls decorated with cedars, evergreens and
captured battle flags. The Union army had to work harder for dance partners;
the Fifteenth Wisconsin put two of its soldiers in drag for a party at the
local schoolhouse.
Beatty’s disappointment with his attempt to honour the day
was more in line with the general mood. Melancholy ultimately won out over
Yuletide cheer. While Christmas Day offered soldiers a brief escape from the
daily grind of army life, it was also a pointed reminder that they were far
from loved ones. Many chose to spend the free time they had writing letters
home or, seated around the campfire, recalling earlier and happier Christmases.
Many would only be ghosts at Christmases yet to come. Over New Year
three-thousand would die at the Battle of Stones River.
Things were little happier at home. In a novel written
shortly after the war, Louisa May Alcott describes how her ‘Little Women’ woke
to find no stockings hung in the fireplace, but a bible under each pillow. The
absence of, and concern for, Father, is a constant through the whole day. In
the South children were even harder done by. The Union Navy had blockaded all
the ports, basic foodstuffs were exorbitant and most presents would be
homemade. In a harsh move to manage expectations, General Howard Cobb’s
children were simply told that Santa Claus had been shot.
Lincoln spent the four wartime Christmases in the White
House and for the last received a present much larger but every bit as odd as
his pigtail whistle. General Sherman, having devastated much of Georgia,
telegraphed Lincoln. ‘I beg to present you as a Christmas gift the city of
Savannah…’
Nast would continue his Harper’s Weekly cover pictures long
after the war. Christmas traditions in America, solidified and somewhat unified
by a new sense of what it meant to be American, would endure. But this wasn’t
the most telling change in Christmas celebrations.
Before and during the war, enslaved African-Americans only
enjoyed Christmas at the whim of their ‘benevolent’ masters. There may have
been extra leisure time, better food, parties and even permission to travel to
visit relatives. No doubt the slaves made the best of what was granted to them.
The most profound change in the celebration of Christmas brought on by the
Civil War was that in 1865, after the total Union victory, four million former
slaves were free to make their own plans for Christmas.
Richard Buxton
Richard Buxton grew up in Wales
but has lived in Sussex for the last thirty years. He is a 2015 graduate of the
Creative Writing Masters programme at Chichester University. He studied in
America during his twenties and tries to return there as often as he can for
research and inspiration. His writing successes include winning the Exeter
Story Prize, the Bedford International Writing Competition and the Nivalis
Short Story award. His US Civil War novel, Whirligig,
released this spring, was shortlisted for the 2017 Rubery International Book
Award.
Richard loves to hear from readers, you can find him... Website
Richard loves to hear from readers, you can find him... Website
Whirligig
Shire leaves his home and his life in Victorian England for the sake of a childhood promise, a promise that pulls him into the bleeding heart of the American Civil War. Lost in the bloody battlefields of the West, he discovers a second home for his loyalty.
Shire leaves his home and his life in Victorian England for the sake of a childhood promise, a promise that pulls him into the bleeding heart of the American Civil War. Lost in the bloody battlefields of the West, he discovers a second home for his loyalty.
Clara believes she has escaped from a predictable future of obligation and privilege, but her new life in the Appalachian Hills of Tennessee is decaying around her. In the mansion of Comrie, long hidden secrets are being slowly exhumed by a war that creeps ever closer.
The first novel from multi-award winning short-story writer Richard Buxton, Whirligig is at once an outsider’s odyssey through the battle for Tennessee, a touching story of impossible love, and a portrait of America at war with itself. Self-interest and conflict, betrayal and passion, all fuse into a fateful climax.
Such a fabulous post! Thank you so much for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the idea for the series, Mary. So many people are enjoying the posts.
DeleteVery good. Of to read the blurb for your book.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lisa. Have a good Christmas however you celebrate it.
DeleteSanta Claus had been shot ~ What a thing to say to a child! Great Post, so informative. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Beatrice. I think I might have toned down the Santa Claus comment too.
DeleteSuch an informative post. I never considered what Christmas was like during this time before. Not easy, that's for sure.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed it, Jackie. I love the period because while it's 150 years, sometimes it feels not so long ago, just on the edge of the world we think we understand.
DeleteGreat post! I've just started reading Whirligig and I'm really enjoying it!
ReplyDeleteI'm thrilled to hear that, Cryssa!
Delete