If you write memoir and family stories, this time of year is perfect for relating how your family obtained a Christmas tree each year. When I grew up, the only artificial trees were those awful silver ones that looked as fake as could be. Some revolved on a stand and had a spotlight shining on them. My family went to the same tree lot year after year and the process was the same each time. I wrote about it years ago and the story still brings a smile as I remember the annual trek to get a tree. Getting the tree, whether you lived in city or country or small town, was a major event.
My story is below. Read it and see if it triggers memories of your own so that you can write your story for your Family Stories book or to submit to a magazine like Reminisce or Good Old Days. You might consider sending your story to your local paper. Your story is too late now for the magazines, but send it mid-year for Christmas 2018 issues.
Finding The Right
Christmas Tree
By Nancy Julien Kopp
In the 1940’s, we
city folk didn’t cut down a tree in the fields but kept our own tradition. On a
cold December evening, Dad announced that it was time to find a Christmas tree.
My two younger brothers and I grabbed heavy coats, hats, gloves and snow boots,
and flew down three flights of stairs to our 1939 Plymouth . Our excitement bubbled over in
giggles and hoots.
The corner lot Dad drove to, normally empty, now held dozens
of evergreen trees. The pines and firs seemed to have appeared magically, lined
up like the toy soldiers my brothers played with. A wire had been strung around the lot and
bare light bulbs attached. There was plenty of light to allow buyers see the
assortment of trees that would decorate the homes in our neighborhood.
.
The proprietors, who were also hunters, had erected a wooden
tepee-like frame in a prominent corner to display two dead deer and a black
bear. They were hung from hooks and occasionally swayed when the wind gusted.
My brothers and I marched round and round the frozen animals.
“Go ahead, touch it,” Howard dared.
My hand reached within inches of the thick, matted fur of
the bear, but I quickly drew it back. “You first,” I challenged, but Howard
only circled the animals, hands behind him.
Meanwhile, Dad walked the rows of trees, pulling a few
upright, shaking the snow off.
He called to us and we crunched across the snow-packed
ground
Dad held a tree
upright. “No,” we chorused. “It’s not big enough.”
We followed Dad and thumbed our noses at several other trees.
“Not big enough,” we repeated, stamping cold feet to warm them.
The owner ambled over, so bundled up he looked kin to the dead
bear. He kept a cigar clamped in his teeth and wore gloves with the fingers cut
off, so he could peel off dollar bills from the stack he carried to make
change.
Dad shook the man’s hand and said, “OK, let’s see the good
trees now.”
The burly man moved the cigar from one side of his mouth to
the other, rolled his eyes and finally gestured for us to follow him.
We scooted across the pine-scented lot to a brick building.
The man opened a door, and we tromped single-file down a long flight of
concrete steps.
Even more trees leaned against the walls. Dad pulled out one
after the other until he found a tree that we three children deemed “big
enough.”
Silence now, as the serious part of this adventure
commenced. Dad and the cigar chomping man dickered about the price. Finally, money
changed hands, and Dad hoisted the tree. We jostled one another up the steps to
be closer to the green treasure.
Dad fastened the tree to the top of the car with the rope
he’d brought with us. The boys and I knelt on the back seat, watching to make
sure the tree didn’t slide off the roof of the car during the short drive.
Once home, Dad hauled the tree up three flights of stairs to
our apartment and put it on our small outdoor balcony. We’d wait until close to
Christmas to bring it in and decorate the branches. Several times a day, I
peered through the glass door to check that no one had stolen it. Why I thought
someone would climb to the third floor balcony to steal our tree is a wonder.
Days later, Dad carried the tree inside and tried to put it
in the stand, but it was no use. The tree was too tall. It should have been no
surprise, as it happened every year. He always caved to our chorus of “not big
enough.” Dad found his favorite saw and cut several inches off the tree trunk.
When he put it in the stand, it rose like a flagpole, straight and tall, nearly
touching the ceiling. There was a collective “Ahhh” from the entire family.
Dad hummed a Christmas tune as he strung the many-colored lights,
then Mother helped us hang sparkly ornaments, and we finished with strand upon
strand of silver tinsel, being warned to place it strand by strand. “No
throwing it at the tree,” Mom said. Near the finish line, we did throw that
tinsel when Mom went to the kitchen. It was great fun to toss it and see how
high we could throw.
Finally, Dad climbed a step-stool and placed the last piece
on the top. What joy to see our special angel with the pink satin dress and
golden wings. The tree was so tall that her blonde hair skimmed the ceiling. I
visited her every day while the tree was up. There were days when it seemed she
smiled at me. Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without her.
That sweet angel got lost somewhere over the years. Most
likely, she’d become tattered and torn, and Mother discarded her long after we
children had grown and left home.
Now, my husband brings our tree upstairs from a basement
storage closet. Artificial, always the same height, never needs to be made
shorter. It’s easier, but I miss those cold, snowy excursions to the tree lot
with my brothers. I still put an angel on top of the tree. She’s nice but not
quite the same as the one with the pink dress and golden wings. Not once has
she smiled at me.
A short story; My brother Bob went with our Dad to buy the tree; always a balsam because when it warmed up our home would be scented by it's aroma.I never knew where they went. I was the kid in our family. When I hear the car in the drive I would go to the cellar to unlock the bulkhead door so they could bring it in there. The tree was left in the cellar to warm up and dry off if it had snow on it. In a few days Dad would cut a small portion off the trunk before setting it into the 'three-legged' stand. He said that was so there was a fresh end for the tree to soak up the water in the cup of the stand. I'd help by holding the tree steady and straight, I hoped, while Dad turned the three screws into the trunk. Getting the tree up the narrow stairway, turning right through the hall at the top, and two more doorways to get it into the livingroom was a feat in itself. Our family's spirits were gleeful waiting for Dad to set our Christmas tree right at the front windows where everyone could see it's lights from the street. We couldn't decorate until Dad had taken care of the lights, testing each bulb because if one burned out, the whole string went dark. (This was his expertise resulting from his education.) When he decided I was old enough, he let me help with that task. Then my brother, sister, Marie, and I would have our fun hanging the paper chains we'd made from last years greeting cards, popcorn garlands, and the bobbles collected over the years since Mom and Dad had married. Many were imported from Germany before WWII. Now my daughters have those that survived the years of Christmases.
ReplyDeleteWhat a delightful story. Many thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Nancy. It was spontaneous.
ReplyDelete