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One of the many yards decorated in Seminole for Christmas. These 2 snowmen fit right in for the holidays.
Read moreSoon after the time when John the Baptist was born, Joseph the carpenter of Nazareth had a dream.
Read moreAccording to legend, Clement Clarke Moore wrote his immortal poem, A Visit from St. Nicholas, also known as The Night Before Christmas, for his family on Christmas Eve 1822. He never intended that it be published, but a family friend, Miss Harriet Butler, learned of the poem sometime later from Moore’s children. She copied it into her album, and submitted it to the editor of the Troy (New York) Sentinel where it made its first appearance in print on December 23, 1823. Soon, the poem began to be reprinted in other newspapers, almanacs and magazines, with the first appearance in a book in The New York Book of Poetry, edited by Charles Fenno Hoffman, in 1837.
Read moreIt’s a familiar show.
Read moreBy the end of the 1960s, the production team of Arthur Rankin, Jr. and Jules Bass had a well-established niche in the annual holiday TV schedule.
Read moreBalsam wreaths and visions of sugarplums had barely faded in the first weeks of 1939, but thoughts inside the Chicago headquarters of retail giant Montgomery Ward had already turned to the next Christmas 11 months away.
Read moreFor many Christians, Santa Claus is nothing but a secular distraction to the celebration of one of the greatest events in human history — the birth of Jesus Christ.
Read moreA man named Bob May, depressed and brokenhearted, stared out his drafty apartment window into the chilling December night.
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