Thursday, December 24, 2020

So were they on the naughty or nice list?

Other things to occupy your mind with other than COVID-19 - According to legend, President Theodore Roosevelt was an avowed conservationist and forbid his family from bringing Christmas trees into the White House

The president was against real Christmas trees because he feared that Christmas trees would lead to deforestation. Roosevelt’s two youngest sons, Archie and Quentin, went outside and cut down a smallish tree right there on the White House grounds, snuck back into the White House, and hid it in a closet. The two boys decorated the tree in secret and even enlisted the help of an electrician on staff at the White House to help decorate it with lights. When Christmas morning came, Archie gathered his family outside the closet, turned on the switch, and opened the door to reveal the tree decorated with gifts for the entire family.


It's a tad late in the day to be asking but were you naughty or nice this year?





(Perhaps Mr. Bourdain will intercede on your behalf; after all, Buddha is a catholic saint.)


December 24, 1940 -
George Cukor's classic film-comedy The Philadelphia Story, starring Cary Grant, Katherine Hepburn, and Jimmy Stewart premiered on this date.



Cary Grant demanded top billing and $100,000 salary--a huge amount at the time. As it turned out, however, he donated his entire earnings to the British War Relief Fund.


December 24, 1951 -
Gian Carlo Menotti's Amahl and the Night Visitors became a Christmas classic on this date.



The one surviving kinescope of this first production was thought to have been lost forever, accidentally destroyed by someone at NBC after it had been screened for an executive, but another copy was discovered at the Museum of Radio and Television, in New York.


December 24, 1953 -
Jack Webb's series Dragnet aired a special episode, The Big Little Jesus on this date.



The episode was network television's first half-hour color film. It was the only color show of the series. Those of you with very sharp eyes can tell with some prompting that this is not the color episode.

Sorry about that.


December 24, 1977 -
The Bee Gees started a three week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with How Deep Is Your Love, the group's 4th US No. 1.



The Bee Gees wrote this for the American singer Yvonne Elliman. Robert Stigwood, who produced the movie Saturday Night Fever, insisted the Bee Gees perform it themselves for the soundtrack. Elliman did sing If I Can't Have You, which was written by The Bee Gees and included on the soundtrack.


- Hey you, get to bed, your parents have a lot to do tonight.


Today in History:
December 24, 1818
-
The classic Christmas carol, Silent Night, was first performed on this date.



At St. Nicholas Church in Oberndorff, Austria, Franz Gruber, composed on his guitar the melody for Silent Night. The music was combined with the words from Joseph Mohr's poem, Stille Nacht.


December 24, 1826 -
On hearing that their Christmas celebrations had to be alcohol-free, several West Point cadets smuggled in a few jugs of whiskey. Their private party got out of hand, and the ensuing melee became known as The "Eggnog Riot", (the 'Whiskey Rebellion' had already been taken ).



Shots were fired, and an artillery unit had to be called in to calm things down. Among the participants was future President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis.


December 24, 1865 -
Southern white folks united together to form a service organization wherein they consort with other southern white folks on this date.



Members participate in festive cruciform fire ceremonies and lively negro butcherings.



By the 1920s membership in the Ku Klux Klan reaches an astonishing two million.


December 24, 1867 -
This was the first time that the R.H. Macy's department store in New York City remained open until midnight to catch last-minute shoppers.



Things never change.


December 24, 1914 -
World War I was only months old on Christmas Eve 1914 when an extraordinary unofficial truce occurred in many places along the Western Front. "We were all moved and felt quite melancholy," wrote one German soldier, "each of us taken up with his own thoughts of home." German and English troops, often less than one hundred yards from each other, set aside warfare to trade Christmas greetings and sing familiar carols in two languages (If you remember correctly, most of the major players in this war were more than just on a first name basis - they were all related to a minor German prince who happened to be married to his cousin, the Queen of England.)



The truce, probably observed by two-thirds of the British and German troops, ended with the holiday, but reasserted the basic decency of ordinary men like these British and German soldiers caught up in war.


December 24, 1954 -
Rock musician Johnny Ace plays a little .45 calibre solitaire (Russian Roulette) at City Auditorium in Houston after a concert.



Blammo.



He thought it would impress his girlfriend - perhaps it did.


December 24, 1955
NORAD tracked Santa for the first time in what will become an annual Christmas Eve tradition,

thanks to a misprinted phone number in a Sear’s retail catalogue, on this date.



For the first several years, it was run by the Continental Air Defense Command (CONAD) Center. (Psst bunkies don't worry - Even though the president may believe that NORAD is part of the deep state, NORAD will continue to track Santa's progress this year.)


December 24, 1968 -
Apollo VIII astronauts read passages from the Old Testament Book of Genesis and transmitting a message to all mankind calling for 'peace on earth', during a Christmas Eve television broadcast. The three astronauts, James A. Lovell, William Anders and Frank Borman (our friend with the messy space suit,) had reached the Moon.



They would orbit the moon ten times, paving the way for the first Earthling to walk on the lunar surface some seven months down the road .


December 24, 1985 -
Fidel Castro announced that he has given up cigars on this date.

Perhaps Castro will intercede on your behalf with Santa.


You'd better hurry up and finish your shopping before I start explaining how the War of 1812 was resolved by the Treaty of Ghenet on this date in 1814 and yet the Battle of New Orleans took place on January 8, 1815, after the treaty was signed.



And so it goes.

Tomorrow is Christmas!


While your wrapping your gifts, here's some Sinatra on the digital Victrola to put you in that holiday mood



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1 comment:

Jim H. said...

Dear Doctor: We of the frozen North wish you a happy new year. Please continue to entertain, inform, and delight your loyal followers (bunkies?) in 2021.