Christmastime 1922

Families created their own entertainment before radio and TV. When the Wilson family lived at Stuart during the 1920s, Doris was about 4 years old. Her older brothers were 6 and 7, the twins just eighteen months.

Leora sang while her children marched around the table. One of the tunes was the Ragpicker Song, “Any rags, any bottles, any bones today?” She also sang Civil War songs she remembered her own mother singing when she was a child.

Twins Dale and Darlene are in front. Back: Doris, Donald, and Delbert Wilson, Stuart, Iowa, about 1922

They must have gotten some toys, but the only tidbit Leora left for us in her memoir was that around Christmastime, she sang to them “Jolly Old Saint Nicholas,” substituting the names of her children:

Jolly old Saint Nicholas, lean your ear this way.
Don’t you tell a single soul what I’m going to say.
Christmas Eve is coming soon, now you dear old man
Whisper what you’ll bring to me. Tell me if you can.
Delbert wants a story book. Doris wants a dolly.
Donald wants some roller skates–he thinks dolls are folly.
As for me. . . etc. 

From Leora’s Early Years: Guthrie County Roots

14 comments

  1. I remember my mother singing that song (“Jolly Old Saint Nicholas”) to us kids when we were growing up, but she didn’t personalize it the way Leora did her version. We heard it on the radio, too. Haven’t heard it in a long time.

  2. Totally cool, Joy. A memory where that happened was when I was maybe 8. We spent it with my aunt and right in the middle of it all, we had a power outage. That was my old Granny’s last Christmas with us (we didn’t know it was coming), and she started a singalong.

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