The Christmas Tree - an Event at
Woodland
As a child, I would hear my parents and grandparents talk
about the Christmas Tree – not as an object but as an event. In the 1930s, both
schools (Belford and Woodland) in the Big Bend community held an evening extravaganza each December for
the students and their families at each particular school.
My father, Edmund Gates, Jr., recalls the enormous decorated tree in the
Woodland (not to be confused with the district consolidated in 1990, also named Woodland) schoolhouse located where Lester Anson’s home is currently. The
students would perform in the school Christmas program. Then the highlight of
the evening was the children receiving gifts that decorated the tree.
The parents would purchase gifts for their children and then take the gifts to a designated lady from the community who would tie the gifts to the school tree. The children could hardly wait to have their names called and receive a gift from the Christmas tree. As children living in the Great Depression, you can imagine their anticipation.
The most memorable Christmas tree for Edmund Jr. was in 1931 when his younger brother Jess at age eight received a rifle off the tree. To his delight, Edmund Jr. who was 12 years old received a watch when his name was called. It was a magical night filled with beautiful music, delicious (and scarce) sweet treats, and laughter as the children shared with pride what the Christmas tree had given them. In the excitement of the evening, Edmund laid his newly acquired watch on a school desk. Unfortunately, he only briefly enjoyed the first expensive gift he’d ever been given, before it was stolen.
The parents would purchase gifts for their children and then take the gifts to a designated lady from the community who would tie the gifts to the school tree. The children could hardly wait to have their names called and receive a gift from the Christmas tree. As children living in the Great Depression, you can imagine their anticipation.
The most memorable Christmas tree for Edmund Jr. was in 1931 when his younger brother Jess at age eight received a rifle off the tree. To his delight, Edmund Jr. who was 12 years old received a watch when his name was called. It was a magical night filled with beautiful music, delicious (and scarce) sweet treats, and laughter as the children shared with pride what the Christmas tree had given them. In the excitement of the evening, Edmund laid his newly acquired watch on a school desk. Unfortunately, he only briefly enjoyed the first expensive gift he’d ever been given, before it was stolen.
Edmund Gates, Jr.in the 1930s |
He (Jesus) came to His own, and His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, He gave the right to become children of God, to those who believe on His Name. Taken from the Gospel of John, chapter one, verses eleven and twelve.
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