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The ‘War on Christmas’ predates Trump, SNL and Fox News by almost 400 years

The National Christmas Tree on the Ellipse, just south of the White House, after being lit by President Trump on Thursday. Calvin Coolidge lit the first National Christmas tree in 1923. (Scalzo/Epa-Efe/Rex/Shutterstock)

A town crier walks through the streets on Christmas Eve, yelling “No Christmas! No Christmas!”

Traditional Christmas foods are banned — no mince pies, and definitely no pudding. Stores are forced to stay open all day on Dec. 25, and children are required to go to school. Any violations of the ban on Christmas are a criminal offense.

What is this vision? Are we talking about the post-apocalyptic world predicted by Fox News, where Hillary Clinton won and “Happy Holidays” became the law of the land? Was this what President Barack Obama was planning all along, as a secret Muslim?

Trump brought ‘Merry Christmas’ back to the White House? Fact check: Wrong.

Nope. This is what December looked like in 1647, when the Puritans banned Christmas in Boston because it was seen as nothing more than an unholy pagan ritual. Even the day, Dec. 25, was likely pegged to the Roman, midwinter festival of Saturnalia, according to biblical scholars who can’t quite agree on the day, month or even year that Christ was born. So what place did it have in the New World?

How’s that for a War on Christmas?

The struggle over Christmas was fodder for a Saturday Night Live spoof with Trump, as always played by Alec Baldwin, and Melania, played by Cecily Strong, decorating their tree and wishing everyone a Merry Christmas.

“That’s right, you can finally say that again, because the war on Christmas is over,” Baldwin’s Trump says. “It will soon be replaced by the war with North Korea.”

The alleged war predates Fox News and Trump’s “Merry Christmas” campaign promises. When the president lit the National Christmas Tree Nov. 30, he was part of a holiday struggle as old as the colonies.

As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump vowed to make America say “Merry Christmas” again. He surely says it a lot himself. (Video: Bastien Inzaurralde/The Washington Post)

It began with Christians, yes. And the Puritan ethos held strong in New England for nearly 200 years when it came to Christmas.

‘Celebrating Merry Christmas again’: Trump opens new front in the culture wars

It wasn’t until 1870 that Christmas was even recognized as an official, federal holiday in America. And no wonder it took so long. Christmas celebrations, as they were sporadically celebrated in our new nation, got a bad name in the 1826 Eggnog Riot.

Yes, you read that right. A bunch of whiskey was smuggled into the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and at least a third of the cadets — including Jefferson Davis, future president of the Confederacy — got so drunk on their spiked eggnog that they rioted until Christmas morning.

Christmas has been dividing the nation along predictable lines since before the Civil War. Pious Northerners preferred Thanksgiving over Christmas as their big holiday. Southerners, meanwhile, saw Christmas as one of the peak days of the social season, and it was made an official holiday in Alabama in 1836, then in Louisiana and Arkansas in 1838, long before it became a federal holiday.

Thanksgiving’s hidden past: Plymouth in 1621 wasn’t close to being the first celebration

And Santa was frequently deployed as a prop in both Union and Confederate propaganda during the Civil War. Harper’s Weekly ran a cartoon showing Saint Nick handing a puppet with a rope around its neck to Jefferson Davis. Meanwhile, the Richmond Examiner called Santa a “Dutch toy monger” and New York “scrub” who had nothing to do with a traditional Virginia Christmas.

And you thought Christmas dinner at Grandma’s was a battleground.

That 1870 declaration making Christmas an official holiday was President Ulysses S. Grant’s attempt at unification. Nice try, Grant. The peace didn’t last long.

The culture war over Christmas cranks up whenever the country experiences social change and upheaval.

In the 1920s, it was led by automaker and rabid anti-Semite Henry Ford. He published a newsweekly called the “The International Jew” and described the war on Christmas this way: “Last Christmas most people had a hard time finding Christmas cards that indicated in any way that Christmas commemorated Someone’s Birth.”

“The whole record of the Jewish opposition to Christmas … shows the venom and directness of [their] attack,” Ford wrote.

The Great Depression and World War II gave the nation other things to worry about. But the obsession with an endangered Christmas came roaring back in the 1950s when the John Birch Society decided that the glamorization and commercialization of Christmas was one big communist plot.

“One of the techniques now being applied by the Reds to weaken the pillar of religion in our country is the drive to take Christ out of Christmas — to denude the event of its religious meaning,” wrote Hubert Kregeloh in a Birch society pamphlet.

Kregeloh warned that holiday and winter decorations in stores that didn’t evoke Christ were “part of a much broader plan, not only to promote the UN, but to destroy all religious beliefs and customs.” And he urged all Americans to boycott department stores without proper, religious décor.

Sound anything like the effort a couple of years ago to boycott Starbucks because it decided on minimalist, all-red cups for the Christmas season? That’s right, the Reds are coming back.

Christmas is not in danger. In fact, 92 percent of Americans asked by the Pew Research Center in a 2013 study said they celebrate Christmas. Even 87 percent of non-Christians said they celebrate the holiday.

The Puritans would be appalled.

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