This is one of the 8.5 inch Old World Santas made of a tin body and resin head, arms and coat. Our Resin Santa Claus Figurine is holding a tin Christmas tree topped with a gold star in his left hand a gift ready to be placed under the tree that is wrapped in green with a yellow ribbon. This adorable Old World Santa Claus Figurine also has a piece of Holly on top of his cap. He has long white hair and beard made of resin. There are Christmas tree shaped holes cut around the tin body of this Santa Claus Figurine for light from a battery candle placed inside to shine through. Select this link to view our Battery Candles. These are perfect as stand alone decorations or as a battery candle cover. The body is made of tin and painted with a red brick color. The coat is resin, painted a dark blue with white trim and Santa has dark brown mittens on his hands. His hair and face with kind blue eyes are also made from resin. Select this link to view our Christmas Candleholders.
History of Santa Claus in America.
The most famous of the Christmas gift bringers, Santa Claus is only about 200 years old, the descendant of older European figures and the product of a movement to produce a distinctively American Christmas. The history of Santa Claus begins with Saint Nicholas of Myra, an early Christian bishop of Asia Minor, whose popularity throughout the middle ages and around whom numerous stories of kindness to children developed. By the 12th century he was the patron saint of children and in his name gifts were given to little ones on his feast day of December 6 or on its eve. Children left out stockings or shoes for him by the window or door, as chimneys were rare in Europe until the 1500’s. In the 16th century, religious reformers attacked the excessive devotion given to saints and in Protestant areas Saint Nicholas lost his job as bringer of Christmas gifts. He was replaced either by the Christ Child or by secularized versions of himself, usually dressed in fur. Thus in 17th and 18th century Germany figures appeared such Knecht Ruprect, Pelznickel or Belsnickel, which meant “Furry Nicholas”, who either accompanied the Christ Child, who came to be known as the Christkindl or who appeared in his stead. In other Protestant countries such as England, the giving of gifts to children declined and there was no particular gift bringer. In Scotland, the Calvinist Church forbade Christmas festivities of all kinds and so gift giving and merriment shifted to New Year’s.
During the late 1700’s in much of the United States, Christmas was a time of boisterous, outdoor fun, with feasting, noise making and wandering about at all hours of the night troubling one’s wealthier neighbors for hospitality. During the first half of the 19th century, Christmas would be remade with rowdiness and social inversion being replaced by a child centered, family oriented holiday that rendered the streets safer and the merchant happier. Central to this important social change was the invention of Santa Claus by a small group of New York men of letters. Select this link to view our Unique Christmas Gifts. To some in the newly independent United States things Dutch were symbols of anti British republicanism. St. Nicholas had been a rebel symbol in New York during the revolutionary war and with tension still running high in the early years of the 19th century St. Nicholas would be useful again. In 1809 American writer Washington Irving wrote a mock chronicle entitled Diedrich Knickerbockers History of New York in which he claimed that the early Dutch settlers revered Sinterklass or Saint Nicholas who visited every December. He was widely believed to ride a horse and wagon through the skies, slide down chimneys with presents and smoke a pipe. Irving seems to have invented this Dutch American attachment to Saint Nick. The first mention of him in the New York area dates to a dinner on December 23, 1773, in honor of the saint otherwise called “St. a Claus.” The next year George Pintard published a pamphlet in Dutch and English showing pictures of St. Nicholas dressed as a bishop, presents stuffed into stockings by a fireplace a good child with treats and a bad child with a switch. The verse read in part; Saint Nicholas, my dear good friend! To serve you, ever was my end, If you will, now, me something give, I’ll serve you ever while I live. Select this link to view our Collectible Santa Claus Gifts.
