On Tuesday,
November 24, 2015, the City of Chicago will conduct its 102nd annual
Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony. The
tree will be located in Millennium Park at Michigan Avenue and Washington
Street, just two blocks north of the location of Chicago’s first Christmas tree
in 1913. Since 1966, the official
Christmas tree has stood in Daley Plaza (except for 1982 when it was placed at
State Street and Wacker Drive). In this
article, we will look at the beginning of the decades long tradition of the
placement of the tree in Grant Park.
Charles L. Hutchinson
The idea for the
1913 municipal Christmas tree started many weeks in advance with the creation
of the Municipal Christmas Festival Association headed by Charles L.
Hutchinson, long time president of the Art Institute. Hutchinson assembled an impressive list of artisans
to assist the effort including architect Howard Van Doren Shaw, and artists
Frederic Clay Bartlett, Abram Poole, and Lorado Taft, all of whom “(put) aside
their own personal affairs in a public spirited way.”
A large site in
Grant Park north of the Art Institute at Monroe Street was selected and
christened the “Court of Honor” – a name last used during the World’s Columbian
Exposition of 1893. In addition to the
main tree itself, a large arcade consisting of a series of arches served as a
backdrop, with dozens of smaller trees forming a grove.
On December 19, the top section of the tree
was set in place atop a grouping of three huge telephone poles secured in a
concrete base. The top was a single
35-foot tree donated by F. J. Jordan, a former partner of Captain Herman Scheunemann,
the famous captain of Chicago’s “Christmas Tree Ship” which had gone down in
Lake Michigan the previous year. In an article which appeared in the Chicago Tribune on December 20, Jordan
noted:
“This is the best gift I could give to
the city. I have watched this old tree
grow for many years. Many times I was
tempted to bring it to some rich family.
But it didn’t seem quite right to the poor girl and poor boy, who had no
tree at all. Now it belongs to the city,
and rich and poor alike may enjoy it.”
The telephone company funded the erection of the tree and Commonwealth Edison furnished the elaborate lighting. As such, the actual cost of the whole project was only $3,000 – funded by businessmen appointed to the Municipal Christmas Festival Association, and their friends. Henry Blair donated 25,000 tickets on the street railways which were distributed through various social service agencies to children who would otherwise be unable to attend the festivities.
Crowds began to
gather by 4:00pm on Christmas Eve, lining both sides of Michigan Avenue between
Monroe and Washington Streets. The Chicago
Band provided entertainment. Michigan
Avenue was closed to traffic at 5:30pm and soon after, Mayor Carter H. Harrison
Jr. arrived in the company of Charles L. Hutchinson, with a squadron of twelve
mounted buglers from the Illinois National Guard acting as escort. The ceremony began at 5:45pm. Charles Hutchinson opened the festivities,
concluding with the introduction of the mayor, who ended his remarks with the
following statement:
“Let us hope the lights on this tree will
so shine out as to be an inspiration to Christian charity and to inject new
courage and new hope into the hearts of those not so fortunate as we are.”
Mayor Carter H. Harrison, Jr.
At precisely
6:00pm, the mayor pushed a button to illuminate the 600 varicolored bulbs on
the tree and the huge star of Bethlehem at its apex. The crowd, estimated at 100,000, most of whom
had been unable to hear the mayor’s speech, “cheered lustily.”
One of the more
creative aspects of the ceremony setting was designed by artist Abram Poole in
collaboration with the Illinois Central Railroad. The railroad agreed to stop all of its trains
during the ceremony and installed a half dozen engines behind the Court of
Honor. According to a Tribune article on December 21:
“Abram Poole has designed a scheme of
color and lights such as Chicago has never seen since the nights of splendor at
the world’s fair. The colonnade, which
is to form a background for the tree, is to be all trimmed with green,
festooned with lights of all kinds, steady and flickering, and behind this will
be a crimson splendor of Bengal lights on a still larger, more distant
background of white, rolling, billowing, changing steam.”
A “motion
picture machine” was installed in one of the office buildings on the west side
of Michigan Avenue in order to project onto a huge screen installed between the
Christmas tree and the Art Institute.
This was probably the least successful element of the ceremony, as the
films did not relate to the holiday festivities, but instead were provided by
the Public Safety Commission “to show how carelessness may result in accident.”
Following the
illumination of the tree, the band, housed at the north end of the grounds,
played a “Salute to the Nations” – a medley of national anthems.
Crowd facing the Chicago Athletic Association
The crowd then turned to hear a trumpet
fanfare coming from the Venetian balcony of the Chicago Athletic
Association. An improvised sounding
board had been added to the balcony to improve sound quality and the balustrade
was draped in rich red velvet draperies borrowed from the Art Institute. Bass Henri Scott and tenor George Hamlin sang
selections from opera, followed by the opera company chorus and Paulist choir singing
selections from the north terrace of the Art Institute. The ceremony concluded with everyone present
joining in the singing of “The Star Spangled Banner.” The crowd lingered for hours.
The tree was
illuminated nightly throughout Christmas week until New Year’s Day. The Association pronounced the entire event a
huge success, with the hopes that it would become an annual event. More than a century later, we can thank these
civic minded individuals for starting what has become one of Chicago’s most
anticipated and best loved holiday traditions.
Next week: A century ago – the Christmas
tree of 1915 as recalled by John Glessner; perhaps the most spectacular municipal Christmas tree of all.
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