Good morning every one!
I have not made a post here sense September 15th I have been busy with other things that I am currently dealing with. But sense it is October and it is a time for farmers to harvest their crops ranchers to prepare their live stock for the winter, for Hunters to gather and get in their meat for the winter, I thought I would re post the old series of articles I wrote back in 2007 for our very 1st Halloween Urland Spooktacular. I know what some will ask does that mean I am going and restarting the Urland Universe website again? the answer is NO! I am not going to restart the Urland Universe at this time, it was a fun time in my life and yes I do miss it but I have moved on with my life and this blog will have to serve as your entertainment for now. That does not mean I won't restart it later!
History of Halloween
Halloween is a holiday celebrated on
the night of October 31. The word Halloween is a shortening of All Hallows'
Evening also known as Hallowe'en or All Hallows' Eve.
Traditional activities include trick-or-treating, bonfires, costume parties, visiting "haunted houses" and carving jack-o-lanterns. Irish and Scottish immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America in the nineteenth century. Other western countries embraced the holiday in the late twentieth century including Ireland, the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and the United Kingdom as well as of Australia and New Zealand.
Traditional activities include trick-or-treating, bonfires, costume parties, visiting "haunted houses" and carving jack-o-lanterns. Irish and Scottish immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America in the nineteenth century. Other western countries embraced the holiday in the late twentieth century including Ireland, the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and the United Kingdom as well as of Australia and New Zealand.
Halloween has its origins in the
ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain (pronounced "sah-win"). The
festival of Samhain is a celebration of the end of the harvest season in Gaelic
culture. Samhain was a time used by the ancient pagans to take stock of
supplies and prepare for winter. The ancient Gaels believed that on October 31,
the boundaries between the worlds of the living and the dead overlapped and the
deceased would come back to life and cause havoc such as sickness or damaged
crops.
The festival would frequently
involve bonfires. It is believed that the fires attracted insects to the area
which attracted bats to the area. These are additional attributes of the
history of Halloween.
Masks and costumes were worn in an
attempt to mimic the evil spirits or appease them.
Trick-or-treating, is an activity
for children on or around Halloween in which they proceed from house to house
in costumes, asking for treats such as confectionery with the question,
"Trick or treat?" The "trick" part of "trick or
treat" is a threat to play a trick on the homeowner or his property if no
treat is given. Trick-or-treating is one of the main traditions of Halloween.
It has become socially expected that if one lives in a neighborhood with
children one should purchase treats in preparation for trick-or-treaters.
The history of Halloween has
evolved. The activity is popular in the United States, the United Kingdom,
Ireland, Canada, and due to increased American cultural influence in recent
years, imported through exposure to US television and other media,
trick-or-treating has started to occur among children in many parts of Europe,
and in the Saudi Aramco camps of Dhahran, Akaria compounds and Ras Tanura in
Saudi Arabia. The most significant growth and resistance is in the United
Kingdom, where the police have threatened to prosecute parents who allow their
children to carry out the "trick" element. In continental Europe,
where the commerce-driven importation of Halloween is seen with more
skepticism, numerous destructive or illegal "tricks" and police
warnings have further raised suspicion about this game and Halloween in
general.
In Ohio, Iowa, and Massachusetts,
the night designated for Trick-or-treating is often referred to as Beggars
Night.
Part of the history of Halloween is
Halloween costumes. The practice of dressing up in costumes and begging door to
door for treats on holidays goes back to the Middle Ages, and includes
Christmas wassailing. Trick-or-treating resembles the late medieval practice of
"souling," when poor folk would go door to door on Hallowmas
(November 1), receiving food in return for prayers for the dead on All Souls
Day (November 2). It originated in Ireland and Britain, although similar
practices for the souls of the dead were found as far south as Italy.
Shakespeare mentions the practice in his comedy The Two Gentlemen of Verona
(1593), when Speed accuses his master of "puling [whimpering, whining],
like a beggar at Hallowmas."
Yet there is no evidence that
souling was ever practiced in America, and trick-or-treating may have developed
in America independent of any Irish or British antecedent. There is little
primary Halloween history documentation of masking or costuming on Halloween in
Ireland, the UK, or America before 1900. The earliest known reference to ritual
begging on Halloween in English speaking North America occurs in 1911, when a
newspaper in Kingston, Ontario, near the border of upstate New York, reported
that it was normal for the smaller children to go street guising (see below) on
Halloween between 6 and 7 p.m., visiting shops and neighbors to be rewarded
with nuts and candies for their rhymes and songs. Another isolated reference
appears, place unknown, in 1915, with a third reference in Chicago in 1920. The
thousands of Halloween postcards produced between the turn of the 20th century
and the 1920s commonly show children but do not depict trick-or-treating. Ruth
Edna Kelley, in her 1919 history of the holiday, The Book of Hallowe'en, makes
no mention of such a custom in the chapter "Hallowe'en in America."
It does not seem to have become a widespread practice until the 1930s, with the
earliest known uses in print of the term "trick or treat" appearing
in 1934, and the first use in a national publication occurring in 1939. Thus,
although a quarter million Scots-Irish immigrated to America between 1717 and
1770, the Irish Potato Famine brought almost a million immigrants in 1845-1849,
and British and Irish immigration to America peaked in the 1880s, ritualized
begging on Halloween was virtually unknown in America until generations later.
Trick-or-treatingspread from the western United States eastward, stalled by sugar rationing that began in April 1942 during World War II and did not end until June 1947.
Early national attention to
trick-or-treating was given in October 1947 issues of the children's
magazines Jack and Jill and Children's Activities, and by Halloween episodes
of the network radio programs The Baby Snooks Show in 1946 and The Jack Benny
Show and The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet in 1948. The custom had become
firmly established in popular culture by 1952, when Walt Disney portrayed it
in the cartoon Trick or Treat, Ozzie and Harriet were besieged by
trick-or-treaters on an episode of their television show, and UNICEF first
conducted a national campaign for children to raise funds for the charity
while trick-or-treating.
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Trick-or-treating on the prairie.
Although some popular histories of Halloween have characterized
trick-or-treating as an adult invention to re-channel Halloween activities away
from vandalism, nothing in the historical record supports this theory. To the
contrary, adults, as reported in newspapers from the mid-1930s to the
mid-1950s, typically saw it as a form of extortion, with reactions ranging from
bemused indulgence to anger. Likewise, as portrayed on radio shows, children
would have to explain what trick-or-treating was to puzzled adults, and not the
other way around. Sometimes even the children protested: for Halloween 1948,
members of the Madison Square Boys Club in New York City carried a parade
banner that read "American Boys Don't Beg."
That's what we said back years ago but now days most American boys do have to beg in order to keep food in their stomachs and a roof over their heads. Many families live a life of homelessness because no one in America cares about any one but them selves except for those few Christians who try to provide meals and clothes for the less fortunate.
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