Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The History of Santa Claus
Episode Date: December 23, 2021Subscribe to the podcast! https://podfollow.com/everythingeverywhere/ He sees you when you are waking, he knows when you are asleep, and he puts your name on a list. No, I’m not talking about an... omnipresent surveillance state, I’m of course talking about Santa Claus. If you think of Santa, you probably have a very firm idea of what he looks like, but how did this identity get developed? And where did all the lore around him come from? Learn more about the history of Santa Claus and how his legend came to be, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. -------------------------------- Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/EEDailyPodcast/ Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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He sees you when you're awake, he knows when you're asleep, and he puts your name on a list.
No, I'm not talking about an omnipresent surveillance state.
I am, of course, talking about Santa Claus.
If you think of Santa, you probably have a very firm idea of what he looks like.
But how did this identity get developed?
And where did all the lore around him come from?
Learn more about the history of Santa Claus and how his legend came to be on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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If you remember back, not very long ago,
I did an episode on St. Nicholas.
That episode focused on the actual saint,
and I left the development of the modern versions of Santa Claus
to another episode.
Well, this is that episode.
Just to quickly recap,
the Christian St. Nicholas became very popular in Europe,
and became associated with gift-giving, especially to children.
In Dutch, St. Nicholas was known as St. Nicholas, which became shortened to Sinterklaas.
Sinterklaas was depicted as an old man with white hair and a white beard who lived in Spain
and dressed in a red bishop's outfit.
Over in England, there was a fictional person named Father Christmas who was supposed to embody
the spirit of Christmas.
Also, the Protestant Reformation removed the celebration of Saints' Days in many Protestant
countries, and many of the celebrations of St. Nicholas' Day were moved to Christmas,
which was in the same month.
It was in this environment that the Dutch and English traditions mingled in early
19th century America, particularly in New York and New England.
The first step from St. Nicholas to Santa Claus can probably be attributed to the
1809 book written by Washington Irving, A History of New York.
Irving actually wrote the book as a parody of the New York Dutch.
In the book, he used the anglicized Santa Claus instead of the Dutch Sinterklauss.
This wasn't the first use of the term Santa Claus, as it had appeared in print at least
35 years earlier. In addition to popularizing the name Santa Claus, Irving also made him a more
secular character from Sinterklaas. He was no longer portrayed as a bishop, but rather as a Dutch
sailor. In 1821, a children's book was published called A New Year's Present to the Little
Ones from 5 to 12. In it was an anonymously written poem titled Old St. Claus with much delight.
This was noteworthy for being the first depiction of Santa Claus visiting houses on Christmas Eve,
and having a sled pulled by a reindeer,
although in this imaging of Santa, there was only one reindeer.
What really cemented Santa Claus into the popular imagination, however,
was the 1822 poem, A Visit from St. Nicholas,
which most people know today as the night before Christmas.
The poem was originally written anonymously,
but Clement Clark Moore later claimed credit 15 years after it was published.
There has been some controversy about the authorship of the piece,
and some scholars attribute it to Major Henry Livingston, Jr.
Either way, the poem created the rough outline of the Santa that we know today.
The fact that the poem is still read today is an indication of just how much it cemented Santa Claus into the popular consciousness.
In this poem, Santa was given the following attributes.
He was fat and jolly.
He had a white beard.
He had a sleigh filled with gifts, pulled by eight reindeer that could fly.
The reindeer were given the names that we know today, dasher, dancer, prancer, vixen, comet, cupid, Donner, and Blitzen.
And he entered homes by going down a chimney.
Pretty much everything in the poem describes the idea of Santa Claus that we have today.
The name Santa Claus was well and used before the Civil War, but there were regional variations.
One of which was calling him Chris Kringle, which appears to be the variant used in Pennsylvania.
A Kringle is a pastry that comes from northern Europe.
They are often like a pretzel or a circle.
Kringles are very popular where I live during Christmas, and they're the official pastry of the state of Wisconsin.
The next big advance in the Santa Claus mythology came from the famous American
American cartoonist Thomas Nast. His first illustration of Santa appeared in the January 3rd, 1863 edition of Harper's Weekly. In the black and white drawing, Santa is on his sled pulled by reindeer, and he appears to be dressed in an outfit of the American flag. Santa's jacket is the stars and the pants are the stripes. He is delivering presence to a campful of soldiers during the Civil War, which explains the flag outfit. Nass kept drawing illustrations of Santa over the years, and in 1869, a collection of his images were published along with a poem titled
Santa Claus and His Works by George P. Webster. It was this poem that added the detail that Santa
lived at the North Pole. The idea of Mrs. Claus likewise solidified over time. Once you had Santa,
it was much of a stretch to have him be married. The first reference to Mrs. Claus appeared
in 1849, again in a poem, and that appeared here and there over the next few decades, mostly as
a mention that Santa had a wife. In the 1878 poem, Lills Travels in Santa Claus land,
Mrs. Claus is assigned the duty of keeping the ledger of naughty and nice children.
Her appearance has almost always been described as analogous to Santa, older, with white hair, and slightly overweight.
Until television specials, she was never given a first name.
However, the Rankin and Bass TV shows gave her the name, Jessica.
I should make mention of the September 21st, 1897 edition of the New York Sun.
In it was an editorial that subsequently became the most reprinted newspaper editorial in history.
It was there that an eight-year-old Virginia O'Hanlon wrote to the newspaper asking, quote,
Dear editor, I am eight years old, some of my little friends say there is no Santa Claus.
Papa says, if you see it in the sun, it is so.
Please tell me the truth.
Is there a Santa Claus?
End quote.
In the reply to Virginia, the editorial contains the famous phrase, yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.
While most of the Santa Mythos had been established by this point, what really took Santa to the next level was his use in
advertisements. In particular, the images of Santa used by the Coca-Cola company starting in the 1930s.
There is an urban myth that is spread that says Coca-Cola invented Santa Claus, and this is
categorically not true, as is evidenced by everything I've just mentioned so far.
While Coke certainly did popularize Santa, they weren't even the first soft drink manufacturer
to use Santa in an advertisement. A company called White Rock beverages used Santa in a 1915 ad to
sell mineral water. Nonetheless, the Coke advertisements
really entrenched Santa's popularity, as the images were often in full-color magazines.
Pepsi also used Santa Claus in advertising as well in the 30s and 40s.
The main thing the Coke ads did was cement the association of the colors red and white with Santa,
which just so happened to be the colors of Coca-Cola.
They had been used before, but other colors such as green and purple were often used as well.
The 1930s also saw the rise of department store Santas.
The most notable of the department store Santas was Charles W. Howard.
Howard is notable for founding the Charles W. Howard Santa Claus School in 1937.
The school is still in operation today in Midland, Michigan, and about 300 Santas attend the school every year.
There were other small additions to the Santa story, which were added in the 20th century.
One was the association of elves with Santa who make the toys in his workshop.
These stories arose spontaneously in the early 20th century to explain where all the toys came from,
as one person making so many toys in his workshop no longer made sense.
Instead of elves, they were often called gnomes.
Another was an official system for handling letters written to Santa Claus.
This actually began in 1912 at the Midtown Manhattan Post Office in New York, and has been a system-wide program since 1940.
Letters are often routed to various non-profit organizations.
The U.S. postal system can actually postmark letters as having come from the North Pole if you send them to North Pole, Alaska, which is a real town outside of Fairbanks.
There are countries around the world that have similar postal arrangements for whatever their version of Santa Claus is.
The big addition in the 20th century was the addition of a ninth reindeer, Rudolph.
The story of Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer appeared in 1939 by Robert L. May, who wrote a short story for the Montgomery Ward apartment store.
The story was written as a poem with the same meter as a night before Christmas.
The book sold 2.4 million copies in its first run and 3.5 million when it was reissued in 1946.
Believe it or not, at first, the story of Rudolph was rejected because having a red nose was a sign of alcoholism at the time.
This story of Rudolph really became popular with the song that was written in 1949 by Robert May's brother-in-law, Johnny Marks.
The first recording of the song was sung by Gene Autry, and it hit number one in the charts for Christmas of that year.
The Rudolph story and song are one of the only elements of the Santa Claus story that are actually copyrighted and trademarked.
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, which is responsible for detecting incoming nuclear attacks, began tracking Santa in 1955.
They actually took over a tradition that began in World War II when General Dwight Eisenhower staff issued a press release, indicating that North Pole Command had been formed with Santa Claus overseen operations.
Norad now offers a simulated tracking of Santa's sleigh every Christmas Eve, which is often replicated by local news stations and meteorological services.
In the later part of the 20th century until today, there have been countless different depictions of Santa Claus in different forms of media.
Because no one owns any intellectual property associated with the character of Santa Claus,
people are free to use him in almost every way imaginable, including negative depictions such as a serial killer or an alcoholic.
Whatever artistic license people may take with Santa, however, the classic image we have primarily comes from a poem written for children almost 200 years ago.
Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast.
The associate producers are Thorpe Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Ian Yergan's over at Podcast Addict.
They write,
Wonderful podcast, nice and digestible for history fans.
A lot of info packed into a short amount of time.
Thank you, Ian.
Just to let you know, I have it from an inside source
that a five-star review is guaranteed to keep you off the naughty list for at least another year.
Remember, if you leave a review or send in a question,
you two can have it right on the show.
