Origins
of Santa Claus

It is believed that Santa Claus originated with the birth of St. Nicholas
approximately 270 A.D., along the Mediterranean coast of northern Turkey.
According to one account, Nicholas was born to a wealthy, childless
couple after thirty years of marriage and was orphaned at the age of
nine. Reared by guardians thereafter, he developed a strong sympathy
for the poor and needy and devoted a great deal of his time to providing
food, clothing and often money to the underprivileged. Much of his gift
giving was accomplished in secret and, invariably, at night.
A story often told of the young St. Nicholas involves the three daughters
of an impoverished nobleman who was not able to provide them with dowries.
Without dowries they had no hope of suitors. Out of desperation one
of the girls volunteered to sell herself into slavery in order to provide
marriage portions for her two sisters. Informed of their difficulties,
Nicholas came by one night and tossed a small bag of gold down the chimney
or through the open window of the eldest girl’s bedroom where,
according to the legends, it fell into a stocking hanging up to dry.
Shortly thereafter the eldest daughter was married. This same act of
generosity was repeated for the other two daughters with equally happy
results.
While still in his teens, Nicholas became the Bishop of Myra, subsequently
to be identified in early manuscripts as a saint and miracle worker.
Destined to become patron saint of children, Russia, bankers, sailors,
pawnbrokers, vagabonds and thieves, when Nicholas died, probably on
the sixth day of December around the year 340 A.D., he was well on his
way to becoming universally revered as St. Nicholas of Myra.
The practice of bringing gifts in the name of St. Nicholas probably
began in France at the start of the twelfth century. The fifth of December,
proclaimed the Eve of St. Nicholas, was the time when nuns would leave
gifts at the doorstep for the small children of poor families. The custom
spread rapidly into other parts of Europe and was soon being celebrated
by both rich and poor alike. But it was not until 1626 that St. Nicholas
made his way across the Atlantic to North America. He came in the form
of a figurehead on the prow of a Dutch ship, The Good Housewife, filled
with settlers from Holland. Their destination was New Amsterdam at the
southern tip of Manhattan Island. It was here that St. Nicholas’s
foothold in the New World was firmly established. Even after New Amsterdam
fell to the British in 1664, the Dutch persisted in the custom of celebrating
St. Nicholas Eve. Popular pronunciation over the years managed to contract
Saint Nicholas into Sinterklaas, which was eventually corrupted to Sancte
Claus. With Sancte Claus now on the scene, could Santa Claus be far
behind?
Santa Claus

Santa Clause is known by different names all around the world: Father
Christmas in England, Babbo Natale in Italy, Sinter Klass in Holland,
Jul Tomte (which means “little Christmas man”) in Sweden
and Weihnachtsmann and Christkindl or Christ Child in Germany. In Russia
they once spoke of the Miracle Maker but now simply refer to him as
Grandfather Frost. The Chinese have their Lam Khoong-Khoong, meaning
Nice Old Father, and the Japanese have Hoteiosho, who has eyes in both
the back and front of his head and carries a big bag of toys. On January
fifth, Epiphany Eve in Italy, Santa Claus is a woman called Befana,
who comes down the chimney bearing gifts for good little girls and boys.
The three people that are generally credited with the further transformation
of St. Nicholas, the gift-bearing good Bishop of Myra to our own beloved
gift-bearing Santa Claus. They are the author and humorist Washington
Irving, Clement Clarke Moore, a professor at a theological seminary,
and the renowned political cartoonist Thomas Nast.
Under the name of Diedrich Knickerbocker, Washington Irving, author
of such favorite tales as “Rip Van Winkle” and “The
Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” published his beloved A History of New
York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty.
Along with a great deal of gentle humor about the Dutch in New York,
Irving also dealty with their enormous affection for St. Nicholas. In
his physical description of the beloved saint, the bishop’s robes
are replaced by more traditional Flemish attire. Instead of the mitred
hat of a bishop, there was a wide-brimmed hat, hose and a long Dutch
clay pipe. And Irving spoke of the saint flying about in a wagon over
the rooftops of New Amsterdam, dropping gifts into the chimneys of little
children. The author describes him as visiting on only one night a year
and making his entrance via the chimney. This comes close to our own
conception of Santa Claus, but it was not until 1822 when Clement Clarke
Moore penned his timeless poem, “A Visit from St. Nicholas,”
that Saint really took on the appearance of the familiar figure love
by millions today.
During the period of the Civil War, however, that the political cartoonist
Thomas Nast produced a figure that became affixed forever in the minds
of people as Santa Claus. Nast drew his first santa Claus for the cover
of Harper’s Weekly, the leading newspapers of the day. More a
recruiting poster of the Union side during the Civil War than a decorative
Christmas feature, Santa was pictured by Nast as a figure dressed in
stars and strips dispersing gifts. Between the years of 1864 and 1886
Nast’s drawings of Santa Clause, eagerly awaited by a large public,
appeared annually. In these he generally appears as a portly, bewhiskered,
befurred old gent climbing in and out of chimneys with an enormous sack
of toys on his back.
Up until 1886 Nast had always drawn Santa in black ink. Asked by a publisher
to produce color drawings of Santa for a book, Nast had the brilliant
inspiration of giving him a bright red suit with white ermine trim.
Jolly, plump, bewhiskered and all in red, here at last was the Santa
Claus we know so well today.
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