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Candy Canes: The Urban Legend of Christmas
Article:
Over 1.76 billion candy canes are manufactured each year, each
one oblivious to the controversy swirling around it.
The truth is that there are few proven facts about the history
of the candy cane. We know that the simple white sugar stick has
been around since time eternal - or at least as long as candy
has been made - but the facts surrounding the reason for the
distinctive shape and color are widely disputed.
It seems that most 'candy cane experts' agree that the hooked
shape of the candy originated in 1670 at the Cologne Cathedral
in Germany. Prior to this, pure white candy sticks were used to
decorate Christmas trees until a quick-thinking choirmaster came
up with a brilliant plan to keep children quiet during the
long-winded living crčche service by plying them with candy. The
white sticks were given a bent shape to represent the shepherd's
crook. Was it to make candy more befitting a religious
atmosphere? Was it to keep with the nativity theme - a
shepherd's crook instead of a cross? Was it to celebrate Christ
as the Good Shepherd? There doesn't seem to be a record of what
was on the Choirmaster's mind, which leaves the meaning open to
discussion and many theories abound. One is that it symbolizes
the letter 'J', the first letter in Jesus' name. Another is that
it became an emblem for Christians to recognize each other
during time of persecution, much like the fish shape. Whatever
the reasoning behind it, the bent shape was here to stay, and
the candy cane was handed out to children at Christmas services
all over Europe.
Candy canes remained white for many years. Christmas cards
produced prior to 1900 depicted the candy as pure white and then
cards made after that date transformed it into the red and white
striped confection that we know and love. The first record of a
red striped peppermint candy cane comes from the Swedish town of
Granna in 1859 where a widow named
Amalia Eriksson began making pastries and candy canes to support
her family. She called them
polkagris, believed to be
connected to the polka dance! No one seems to know why she chose
to make it striped, or striped red as opposed to another color.
Sometimes candy canes were decorated with sugar roses - was it a
case of candy making gone bad which led to a new invention? Was
there a religious significance so the white represented the
purity of Christ and the red represented the blood of his
sacrifice? Are there three stripes to represent the Holy
Trinity? Was the candy cane peppermint because the hyssop that
was used in Old Testament times for purification and sacrifice
is also in the mint family? It seems to boil down to the 'big
bang' of elements mixing and creating something wondrous or
'creation' with a master plan of meaning and significance.
This holiday season whenever you hang a candy cane on your
Christmas tree, use one to stir your hot apple cider, or munch
one at a party, give a thought as to why it is in existence. Was
it made to keep children quiet in church & feed a widow's
family, or is there a deeper significance that adds meaning to
Christmas as urban legends suggest?
About the author:
Author: Teresa McEachern
Teresa McEachern founded
Lingo T-shirts: t-shirts that talk for you
about your passion for sports, hobbies, family, travel, history,
holidays or wildlife.
Free Christmas Tree Picture News
Train Derailment in Bucksport, No Injuries
Bucksport Fire Department and other emergency responders are on scene of a reported train derailment. It happened a quarter of a mile into the woods near the christmas tree farm on hurdsbrook hill on route 15 at around 7 Friday evening. A dispatcher tells us four cars are over the embankment, . . .
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Katahdin Trust Donates to Park
The Katahdin Trust Company has added a new branch in Bangor, helping out a local park in the process. A special ribbon with $1,700 was cut to open the doors of the branch on Springer Dr. in the Christmas Tree Shops Plaza. It commemorates the bank's 17th branch. Katahdin Trust is donating th . . .
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Pennsylvania Museum to Pay Tribute to Maurice Sendak
The death of Caldecott Medal-winning children's book author Maurice Sendak has put Philadelphia's Rosenbach Museum and Library in the spotlight. The Philadelphia museum is the home to more than 10,000 Sendak-related works and is currently showing the exhibition "From Pen to Publisher: The Life of Three Sendak Picture Books."
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Looking for my other family
Growing up, Liz Jarvis always knew her father was estranged from his first family – including the half-brother and sister she had never met. But nobody ever talked about them. Only years later did she feel free to seek them out … My father, Harry, died suddenly before my 21st birthday, leaving unanswered all the questions I hadn't thought to ask while he was alive. On an October Sunday afternoon ...
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7 ways to give your home a facelift without breaking the bank
On Home and Garden Wednesday we found a great article on Yahoo! Shine about 7 simple ways to spruce up your space without spending a lot -- if anything at all.
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Coverup at Washington Times
Editors knew there was an apparent plagiarist on staff but let him keep writing. An exclusive look inside the paper
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Exclusive First Read: 'Gone Girl' By Gillian Flynn
Darkly funny, suspenseful and cunningly plotted, Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl will be published June 5. In this exclusive selection from the book's opening, we meet Nick and Amy, the seemingly perfect couple whose alternating chapters soon reveal them to be unreliable narrators — and spouses.
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