History Daily - America’s First National Christmas Tree
Episode Date: December 24, 2025December 24, 1923. U.S. President Calvin Coolidge inaugurates a new holiday tradition by putting up a Christmas tree outside the White House. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening ...and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's December 24, 1923 on the ellipse in the President's Park outside the White House in Washington, D.C.
Secret service agent Richard Jervis scans the enormous crowd that's gathered on the lawn.
His eyes flick from face to face.
Most people are wrapped up in hats, scarves, along coats, and that makes sense it's a cold afternoon.
But Jervis knows it would also be the perfect way to conceal a weapon.
As the chief of White House security, such thinking is second nature to Jervis.
Tall and stern-looking, he's the one person who even President Calvin Coolidge has to obey.
Right now, Coolidge is standing with his wife and two teenage sons,
looking up at the huge fir tree that is the reason they're all here.
Nearly 50 feet high, this tree was cut from the green mountains in Coolidge's home state of Vermont,
and in the dimming late afternoon light,
Jervis can make out the thousands of light bulbs draped across its branches,
just waiting for President Coolidge to do the honors.
Jervis checks his wristwatch.
It's just before 5 p.m.
When the ceremony is scheduled to begin,
and he's nervous.
This entire event is a security nightmare.
But at least Coolidge won't be making a speech afterwards.
If everything goes well,
he can get the president back into the safety of the White House
in only a few minutes.
The crowd quiet,
as the bell in the old post office tower
a few blocks away rings out.
President Coolidge has handed an electrical switch
and on the fifth strike of the bell, he presses the button.
In an instant, the tree erupts in light, but Jervis keeps his eyes on the crowd.
But as the colorful bulbs and electric candles come to life,
there's only joy to be seen in the people's faces.
Trumpet sounds, and people begin to sing a Christmas carol.
Eventually, even Richard Jervis has to smile.
President Calvin Coolidge will enjoy a quiet Christmas
alongside his family, close friends, and of course, his bodyguard Richard Jervis.
And as the First Family celebrates inside the White House, outside the first National Christmas
tree will shine like an island of light in the darkness.
From then on, in times of war and in peace, the White House Christmas tree will return
almost every year as a new holiday tradition that began on this day December 24, 1923.
Before we get back to the episode, a quick update on my live tour, the first show will be
in Dallas, Texas on March 6th at the Granada Theater.
It's going to be a thrilling evening of history, storytelling, and music, looking back to explore
the Days That Made America.
And did I mention music?
Yes, because I'm bringing a full band with me.
So come out and see me live in Dallas.
For more information on tickets and upcoming dates, go to historydailylive.com.
That's HistoryDailyLive.com.
Come see my Days That Made America tour live on stage.
Go to HistoryDaily Live.com.
From Noisor in Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham.
And this is He's a lot of you.
History Daily. History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the
people and events that shaped our world. Today is December 24, 1923, America's first national Christmas
tree. It's December 4th, 1923 at the White House in Washington, D.C., just under three weeks before
Christmas Eve. Lucretia Walker Hardy walks through the West Wing, her shoes barely making a sound on the
thick carpet. At 50 years old, Lucrecia.
Lucretia is the acting director of D.C.'s Community Center Department,
a local body responsible for public facilities and events.
She's come to the White House to meet Presidential Secretary Baskin-Slam.
She has an idea she wants to discuss.
There has been a Christmas tree in the White House ever since 1889,
but it's always been part of the private celebrations of the sitting president and his family.
Lucretia wonders now, though, if it's time for President Calvin Coolidge to make more of a statement.
It's been five years since the end of the president,
of World War I, and it's been three years since a deadly flu pandemic swept the nation.
And Lucretia feels that it's only now that the United States is emerging from the shadow of
those terrible events. She thinks a public display of Christmas spirit is just what the country
needs. After a short wait, she's shone into an office and greeted warmly by Secretary Slamp.
He's a slender man in his mid-50s with a long face and heavy-litted eyes.
Behind his polite smiles, however, he has bad news. They simply can't put him.
up a tree on the White House lawn. The First Lady has already arranged a concert for Christmas
Eve when a local choir accompanied by the Marine Band is scheduled to perform. Having a second
public event would just be too much. But Slampp can't offer a compromise. A tree could be placed
nearby on the ellipse instead. Lucretia is disappointed. She doesn't think the ellipse has the same
symbolic value at all, but she's determined not to give up yet, and she has an unlikely
seeming ally. The Society for Electrical Development is a group of power companies that wants to
encourage the use of electricity by ordinary Americans. For over a decade, their pamphlets and advertising
campaigns have informed people how electricity can make their lives and jobs easier. And while they're
not as interested as Lucretia in community events or the Christmas spirit, they are interested in
revenue and profits. So they joined Lucretia's campaign to persuade the president to put up a national
Christmas tree because there would be no better example of the wonders of electricity than a
beautiful lit tree standing beside the White House. The electrical companies are convinced that once
people see their president decking his tree out with colorful electric bulbs, they'll rush to do the
same. So a few days after Lucretia's meeting at the White House, Secretary Slemp has another visitor.
This time, it's a senator from Vermont. He's been convinced by the Society for Electrical Development
to throw his weight behind their campaign, and he goes to the White House.
armed with a new offer, a 48-foot fir tree provided by a liberal arts college in Vermont
completely free, and the Alumni Association has even promised to pay for its shipping.
The Christmas Tree campaign now boasts the backing of local officials and the capital,
a growing national industry, and a prominent senator.
But Secretary Slam still stands firm.
There will be no tree on the White House lawn.
Disappointed, Lucretia and the others are forced to accept the original offer of a spot on the ellipse instead,
but they do secure one compromise.
The lights will be switched on in person by President Coolidge himself.
The tree might not be right outside the White House,
but with this compromise, it will still be linked directly to the president
in the eyes of the people.
So with the deal done, preparations can get underway,
and they have just days to arrange everything.
The huge fir tree has to be transported 400 miles.
Power cables have to be laid across the lawn of the ellipse,
and the people of Washington need to be informed
that a new holiday celebration is coming.
It's a lot to do, but on Christmas Eve, 1923,
the president will emerge from the White House,
walk the short distance to the ellipse,
and switch on the lights in front of a crowd of thousands.
You'll do the same the following year and the year after that.
A new annual tradition will be born
that will mark the start of Christmas in the nation's capital
and light up the Washington night,
even when the world is at its very darkest.
It's the evening of December 24, 1941.
at the White House in Washington, D.C., 18 years after the first National Christmas Tree was lit.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill stands among the white columns of the South Portico
and watches as President Franklin D. Roosevelt speaks to a crowd gathered on the lawn below.
Once again, the time has come for the lighting of the United States National Christmas Tree.
Since 1923 has become an annual tradition, just as the original campaigners hoped,
but this year is like no other.
Less than three weeks have passed since the Imperial Japanese Navy
launched a devastating surprise attack on Pearl Harbor,
and now the United States is at war.
There were many people who urged Roosevelt to suspend the lighting of the National Christmas Tree
for security concerns or because it felt somehow inappropriate.
But Roosevelt rejected those calls.
Now, to the chiming of a bell, he presses a button,
and the crowd applauds as the enormous fir tree glows with lights.
Roosevelt then tells the crowd on the White House lawn,
and millions more listening at home on the radio,
that observing Christmas during wartime is just as important as it is in peace
because hope shines through the darkness and will lead them on to happier times.
Standing in the shadows beside him, Churchill understands exactly what the president means.
The United Kingdom has been fighting Nazi Germany for over two years already,
and Churchill knows that national morale is as important to any war effort as the production of tanks or bullets,
the story that leaders tell their people matters perhaps even more.
more than the orders generals give their soldiers. That's partly why Churchill is here. He arrived
in the United States two days ago, having secretly crossed the Atlantic on a battleship to meet with
Roosevelt. They have already spoken at length about troop mobilization, fleet strength, supply convoys,
and new fronts, but there is still much more to be done to shepherd Britain's new ally into the
fight, and even tonight's ceremony as a part to play. Americans are obviously grieving and angry
after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
They want revenge on the Japanese,
but Churchill wants to make sure that they see the bigger picture,
that they are now part of the same conflict as the one in Europe,
that the Nazis and the Japanese are two sides of the same fascist coin.
The president concludes his remarks and introduces Churchill warmly, saying,
He and his people have pointed the way,
in courage and in sacrifice,
and so I am asking my associate, my old and good friend,
to say a word to the people of America, old and young, tonight.
There's a surge of applause as Roosevelt steps aside,
and Churchill takes his place at the lectern.
He slips on a pair of thick reading glasses
and holds his speech looking out of the twinkling lights on the Christmas tree.
Addressing Americans as fellow workers,
and the cause of freedom, Churchill stresses the close ties between their nations, and urges his
listeners to steal themselves to defend liberty against tyranny. But above all, he tells them to enjoy the
holiday. For everyone, but especially children, Christmas should be an evening of happiness in a world of storm.
Even from a hundred yards away, the applause of the crowd is deafening. After the cheers died down,
carols ring out. Secret service agents approach both leaders and quietly request that they step back
inside the White House, but Churchill offers Roosevelt a cigar, which the president gratefully takes.
And as the bodyguards retreat, the two men smoke on the portico, listening to the music and the
carols for more than an hour. And then, finally, to the relief of the bodyguards, Churchill and
Roosevelt go back inside. It's almost Christmas Day, but they have plenty of work to do. The two men
spend the next three weeks planning, and by the time the National Christmas tree is switched off
in the new year, they will have agreed on a shared strategy for the war.
Three more Christmases will pass, but eventually the light that tree represented will triumph over darkness.
Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan will be defeated. Peace will return, and so too will the National Christmas Tree.
It's December 17, 1954 in Washington, D.C., 13 years after Winston Churchill addressed the American people.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower stands on a stage and looks out over the crowd gathered on the ellipse.
It's been three decades since the first national...
Christmas tree was lit here. But interest in the lighting ceremony has waned in recent years.
So when a man from the Washington Board of Trade presented Eisenhower with a plan to revive it,
the president was all the years. The idea was the pageant of peace. Instead of a single tree
being lit on a single night, the celebration would be a three-week-long festival of light.
The national Christmas tree would remain the centerpiece, but it would be surrounded by smaller trees,
representing all the states and territories as well as America's closest foreign allies.
Last month, Eisenhower gave this idea his go-ahead,
and tonight he's being joined by thousands of spectators to turn on the lights
and formally open the pageant. Between the trees, man-made snow covers the ground.
Wooden walkways help guide visitors past a reindeer petting zoo, puppet shows,
and a living nativity scene which Eisenhower can't help smile when he thinks of.
Some of the sheep from the nativity escaped into the city earlier in the day.
He's told that more than one was returned to the ellipse in a police motorcycle sidecar.
He wishes he could have witnessed that for himself.
He's seen plenty in his long career, but a sheep riding a motorcycle is something else.
The light fades, and then it's time for Eisenhower to let the festivities begin.
In the spirit of the season, he speaks of peace, mercy, and human dignity.
His words are transmitted by television across the United States and out into the world via
the Voice of America radio station.
Then at 5.30 p.m., President Eisenhower ends his speech by wishing his listeners a Merry Christmas
and pressing the button that switches on the lights. The National Christmas tree blazes with more than
2,000 colored bulbs and one by one the rest of the trees in the pageant follow suit.
It's a spectacular sight, and over the next three weeks, half a million people will visit the
pageant of peace. And in the years to come, this event will become part of Washington, D.C.'s
festive calendar, a beloved annual tradition that can trace its roots back to a far simpler
ceremony when a single tree lit up the night on December 24, 1923.
Next on History Daily, December 25th, 1941.
On his weekly radio show, the singer and actor Bing Crosby premieres a new song,
White Christmas.
From Noisor and Airship, This is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me,
Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Moham Shazi, sound designed by Matthew Filler, music by Throne.
This episode is written in research by Samuel Hume, edited by William Simpson, managing producer Emily Byrth.
Executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
