Wacky
Christmas Facts
~ Winter was a time of celebration to pre-Christian
Romans and they decorated fir trees in honor of this seasonal
change.
~ The use of a Christmas wreath as a decoration
on your front door, mantel or bay window symbolizes a sign of welcome and
long life to all who enter.
~Today poinsettias are the most popular Christmas
plant and are the number one flowering potted plant in the
United States.
~ Real Christmas trees are an all-American product,
grown in all 50 states, including Alaska and Hawaii. Most
artificial trees are manufactured in Korea, Taiwan, or Hong Kong.
~ For every real Christmas tree harvested, 2 to
3 seedlings are planted in its place.
~ In 1836, Alabama is the first state in the USA
to declare Christmas a legal holiday.
~ The biggest selling Christmas single of all
time is Bing Crosby's White
Christmas.
~ Due to the time zones, Santa has 31 hours to
deliver gifts? This means that
he would have to visit 832 homes each second!
~ In 1937, the first postage stamp to commemorate
Christmas was issued
in Austria.
~ For every real Christmas tree harvested, 2 to
3 seedlings are planted
in its place. Each hectare provides the daily
oxygen requirements of 45 people.
~ Epiphany, 6th January, is the traditional end
of the Christmas holiday and is the date on which we take down the tree
and decorations. To do so earlier is thought to bring bad luck for the
rest of the year. From the middle ages until the mid-nineteenth century,
Twelfth Night was more popular than Christmas day, and even today some
countries celebrate Epiphany as the most important day of the Christmas
season.
~ Three years after Thomas Edison invented the
electric light bulb in 1879,
Edward H. Johnson, who worked for Edison's company,
had Christmas tree bulbs especially made for him. He proudly displayed
his electric tree lights at his home on Fifth Avenue, New York City. They
caused a sensation although some years were to pass
before mass-
manufactured Christmas tree lights were
widely available.
~ In America in 1822, the postmaster of Washington,
DC, complained that he had to add 16 mailmen at Christmas to deal with
cards alone. He wanted the number of cards a person could send limited
by law. "I don't know what we'll do if this keeps on,"
he wrote.
Back to
Background's
by Tink of webweavers2
If you would like to
use my Christmas background
please use url and link
below to link back to my graphic site.
thank you so much.
http://www.oocities.org/tinksmeadow/dogwood.htm
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