Early mountain Christmas feasts had to make do
By Kathy Hatfield
Correspondent
Though the Pilgrims didn't allow Christmas celebrations during our country's
early history, by the middle of the 18th century, Yuletide festivities
were well established in the eastern United States. But here in the Rocky
Mountain West, Christmas traditions were barely beginning.
Initially, probably the only people in the area with any knowledge of Christmas
were explorers and mountain men, but few, if any, families. One of the
earliest Christmas celebrations in Colorado was in 1806. Lt. Zebulon Pike
and his men were traveling up the Arkansas River, headed towards the Rocky
Mountains. They camped along the river and probably would have starved
without the eight buffalo they killed on Christmas Eve.
Pike reported that his men "appeared generally to be content, although
all the refreshment we had to celebrate that day with was buffalo meat,
without salt, or any other thing whatever." On Christmas day they dried
the rest of their buffalo meat and relaxed, reminiscing about past Christmases:
"Having been accustomed to some degree of relaxation, and extra enjoyments;
but here 800 miles from the frontiers of our country, in the most inclement
season of the year; not one person clothed for the winter, many without
blankets...we spent the day as agreeable as could be expected from men
in our situation."
Almost half a century later and a bit further north, Col. John Frémont,
in his fourth expedition to the West, took 33 men with him, trying to find
a possible railroad route to the west through the mountains. They crossed
the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, passed through the San Luis Valley and
headed into the San Juan Mountains. But as they attempted to climb the
Continental Divide and approached 12,000 feet in elevation, the snow deepened
and the temperatures plummeted. They never reached the divide or accomplished
their mission. Eleven men and all their mules perished in the process.
The Christmas dinner of 1848, as reported by Thomas E. Breckenridge, a
member of the expedition, consisted of fried mule, mule chops, boiled mule,
scrambled mule, French fried mule and numerous other mule dishes. They
even had mule on toast (without the toast) and short ribs of mule with
applesauce (without the applesauce). Beverages were snow, snow water and
water.
In a more civilized part of the state, the discovery of gold at Cherry
Creek brought fortune seekers to Colorado. Determined to celebrate their
future wealth, they planned a Yuletide feast. The Platte River Gold Diggings
Bill of Fare for Christmas of 1858 offered buffalo tongue, grizzly bear,
elk, mountain sheep, pheasant, mountain rat, sand hill crane, squirrel
and white swan as well as more common meats. Vegetables included potatoes,
pumpkins, beans, beets and squash. For dessert, the choices were six types
of pies, three kinds of puddings, plus fruits and nuts. To accompany the
food, there were 13 different wines and spirits, including Monongahela
whiskey and Taos Lightning. After dinner, into the late evening, the miners
toasted friends and family, sang and danced around a bonfire.
In the little town of Fort Collins, Christmas parties often included both
a dinner and dance in lavishly decorated houses. Many families carried
on the tradition of putting up a Christmas tree in their homes, often heading
into the mountains to cut a fresh one. By 1910, the tree-cutting practice
was quite popular and in some areas it was becoming unmanageable. The Forest
Service reminded people that they had to get permission to cut trees and
they requested that people thin the trees, rather than cut down large swaths
of forest.
The corner of College and Mountain avenues was decorated with a huge city
Christmas tree. The people of the community gathered around the tree to
enjoy music and sing Christmas carols. In 1912, the Fort Collins Express
newspaper requested that all Fort Collins residents follow the old English
custom of burning a candle in the window on Christmas Eve to "speak your
message of Christmas cheer to the passer-by." The newspaper proclaimed
"...with the gigantic city Christmas tree at Mountain and College; with
the people of the city gathering in the open for an hour of song and music
about this tree; Fort Collins will present a sight the like of which is
new, particularly in the West."
|