Heirlooms

Family Stories: 1960s Christmas

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My mom in front of her Christmas tree.

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The mantle decorated for Christmas at my great-grandmother's house in Palos Verdes, California.

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My great-aunt Betty (Joan's older sister) pouring tea to go with the fruit cake. I love the Christmas table decor. I have those birds in my dining room!

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Betty, Elsie, Betty's husband Bob, their daughter Cheri, and my mom enjoying Christmas dinner. Joan was taking the picture.

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My mom and Joan on Christmas morning. My mom still has that awesome chair and its mate. The bird candelabra on the right is in my dining room.

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My great-grandmother Elsie and Joan reading Christmas cards.

christmas morningMy mom and Joan on Christmas morning at my great-grandmother's house. Those fireplace pokers are now beside our fireplace.

Family Stories: 1950s Christmas

   

 

 

Today's photos are from the mid-to-late 1950s. My grandparents lived in Anchorage, Alaska for several years when they were first married. My mother came along during their time there, so her first Christmases were spent in the snow. Talk about a white Christmas!

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Joan at home in Alaska. I guess this was her snow attire.

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Joan, her parakeet and some of her Christmas decorations.

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Presents under the tree. I still have that high-chair.

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My mother on Christmas morning.

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My mother and her doll on Christmas day.

 

Family Stories: Meeting Santa

Among the photographic treasures I inherited this year are these photographs of my mom with Santa.

Her first Christmas. She was just over a month old: santa2

This photo is still in its fancy mid-century photo cover.

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Her family lived in Alaska until she was three. You can definitely tell which photos were taken in California (visiting her family) and which photos were taken in Alaska.

Her second Christmas. Halfway through her visit with Santa, she decided she didn't like him very much:

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Her third Christmas:

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This wasn't the same visit with Santa, but it was the same Christmas. She still wasn't sure about sitting on Santa's knee:

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Her fourth Christmas. Looks like they went to the same department store as the previous year:

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Here's one in color. Again, here's the tree from the previous year:

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Love the frame for this undated Christmas photo:

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I love that Joan kept these together. It's really fun to see them as a group.

A Neapolitan Christmas Tradition

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My dad and his younger sister Tina admiring a Presepio in the late 1950s.

Today's family stories post comes from my Aunt Tina. She tells the story of the tradition of the Neapolitan Presepio, one she and my dad enjoyed as children. Today she shares that great tradition with tourists through her company Discover Napoli Destinations.

The Neapolitan “Presepio” or Nativity scene is the most cherished Christmas tradition in southern Italy. During the XVIII century, the royal family introduced the custom of having a space set up to honor the birth of Christ, and in the weeks preceding Christmas, a sumptuous nativity scene was set up and admired by all those who had access to the monarchs. Soon the Nativity scene expanded more and more outside the mere representation of the Holy Family, and it started to include the shepherds, the merchants, the animals and a careful analysis of the food of that period. The figurines were sculpted by the major artists of the time, such as Giuseppe Sammartino, creator of the famous statue of the “Veiled Christ.” The backdrop of the scenes featured typical aspects of Neapolitan life, such as taverns, fishmongers and butchers hanging their wares outside of their shops.

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For this reason, it is possible to find a particular significance for each member of the scene, each particular location represented and even for the single elements that compose the entire scene! The whole Nativity and the figures it contains become a way of describing, identifying and unifying the community from which it stems.  The Neapolitan Nativity scene was and still is an element of identification of the “gens napoletana,” a collective common personality and the forerunner of the realism that characterizes Neapolitan theatrical and movie productions.

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It quickly became fashionable for all aristocratic families, soon followed by those of the bourgeoisie, to display a “Presepio” in each home, obviously on a much simpler scale than the royal one, and in the following years, even the poorer classes honored the coming of Christ by setting up a small Nativity in their homes. The demand for the figurines became incredible, and a new work force emerged, specializing in the figurines as well as the simple or incredibly ornate backdrops for the setting. These artisans were all concentrated in the area around the Church of San Gregorio Armeno, and thus “Christmas Alley” was born!

 

Today Via San Gregorio Armeno, also known as “Christmas Alley," has become a major tourist attraction. Some of the cheaper figurines are molded in plastic, but Neapolitan families still visit every year to add a “piece” to their Presepio! Usually the children of the family choose the new elements to add each year, expanding their scene with a pizza oven or a waterfall, or replacing the figures which inevitably break when they are wrapped up and put away after the Epiphany. It is a moment of major bonding for the families, and each member participates in the composition of the Presepio. Christmas Alley is one of the major traditions that has survived in Naples and is an important part of Neapolitan cultural heritage.

A strong link to the Presepio is also found in the tradition of placing the Holy Child in the Nativity scene at midnight, or upon returning home from the midnight mass where the little figures of baby Jesus are blessed.  The family forms a procession, singing an ancient carol about the birth of Christ and the youngest member is usually the one who has the honor of placing the figurine in the Nativity scene. The Christmas festivities can then officially begin!

A big thank you to my Aunt Tina for sharing this great tradition with us!