It is difficult to comprehend the immense size,
age and stature of the General Grant Tree, but it is easy to let
your mind and spirit rise as its trunk carries your gaze toward
the skies.
This tree has inspired thousands of people including
the late Charles E. Lee of Sanger, California. In 1924 he visited
what was then General Grant National Park, and found himself standing
by the Grant Tree with a little girl. As they admired the huge tree,
the girl exclaimed, "what a wonderful Christmas tree it would
be!"
The idea stayed with Mr. Lee, and in 1925 he organized
the first Christmas program, held at the Grant Tree at noon on Christmas
Day. Mr. Lee, then secretary of the Sanger Chamber of Commerce,
and Mr. R.J. Senior, president of the Chamber, conceived the idea
of an annual ceremony. Mr. Lee wrote to President Calvin Coolidge,
who designated the General Grant as the Nation's Christmas Tree
on April 28, 1926.
At one of the early gatherings, Colonel John White,
longtime Park Superintendent, expressed the feeling that brings
people here year after year. "We are gathered here around a
tree that is worthy of representing the spirit of America on Christmas
Day. That spirit is best expressed in the plain things of life,
the love of the family circle, the simple life of the out-of-doors.
The tree is a pillar that is a testimony that things of the spirit
transcend those of the flesh."
Some people have returned many times to rededicate
themselves to the spirit of the season in the presence of this magnificent
tree:
In 1976, the 50th ceremony was attended by Elizabeth
Gates, who remembered the adventure of getting to the first program
with her father R. J. Senior. It was a much longer, colder and more
hazardous trip than today's.
Peter Beier, 27 years old at the first ceremony,
still had a perfect attendance record at the 50th anniversary. He
even made the trek to the tree in 1971 when a snowstorm had closed
the road and the ceremony was held outside the park. He and a handful
of hardy campers made it to the tree to watch as park rangers placed
the traditional wreath.
A Sanger native who took part in the first ceremony
as a child later returned to deliver the Christmas message. Jasper
G. Havens was a minister in Idaho and Utah when he returned to speak
in 1978. He recalled the cold trip of 1926 in the family's Model-T
Ford.
In 1984, Al Saroyan, then 73, was honored at the
58th ceremony as one of the three Sanger High School trumpet players
who performed at the 1926 event.
The Sanger Chamber of Commerce continues to sponsor
the annual Christmas "Trek to the Tree" on the second
Sunday of December at 2:30 p.m. For more information, contact them
at 559 875-4575.
Credit:
NPS.gov home of the National Park Service and Americas
national parks.
http://www.nps.gov/seki/xmastree.htm
Related
Information:
NBA
Resource Article - A
Safe And Happy Christmas
NBA
Resource Article - Chasing
Away the Holiday Blues
Reprint of this article does not constitute an
endorsement by the National Business Association; the article is
for informational purposes for our members and viewers of our Web
site.
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