Did you know that our image of Santa Claus was created during the Civil War?
By Christmas 1862, many of the Union’s soldiers had been away from home for over 18 months – months that had brought few victories to their cause – and the nation was growing discontent. Just two weeks earlier, the Battle of Fredericksburg had cost the Union 12,000 casualties, and led President Abraham Lincoln to lament, “If there is a worse place than Hell, I am in it.” Into that void stepped one of the nation’s greatest artists, illustrator Thomas Nast, who took it upon himself to lift up the national mood.
Santa Claus was not a Nast creation, but before 1862 the purveyor of Christmas goods and spirit had appeared in many shapes, sizes, and temperaments. Some depictions resembled the Hunchback of Notre Dame more than our present-day image of Santa. Nast changed all that beginning with the image that appeared just a few days after Christmas in January 1863. Nast’s presentation of a happy, white-bearded, rather rotund, and all-around “jolly” figure would become the standard. However, this was wartime, and this early figure has a dark undertone. If you look in Santa’s hand you will see that he is holding a puppet of Confederate President Jefferson Davis – and that Davis has a string wrapped around his neck!
Nast’s illustration was so popular that he continued to offer new images of Santa Claus for years to come. His 1881 image was perhaps the most famous of all.
Further proof that the Civil War lives on, and in the most unexpected ways!
Thomas Nast’s 1881 “Santa”
Recent Comments