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Holiday Hours
The Dundas Museum and Archives will be closed for a handful of extra days over the next two weeks for our hardworking staff to have a short break and to spend time with family.
We will be open December 28th-30th if you’re looking for something to do over the break, with rotating exhibits on display in our Education Centre (The Monday Painters), our Community Curator Corner (Will Weisensee and the Dundas Model Aircraft Club) and our Feature Exhibition (Deep Focus: Dundas Glass Negative Photography, 1850-1930).
Read more here!
- December 24th: Closed
- December 25th: Closed
- December 26th: Closed
- December 27th: Closed
- December 28th: 10 am – 4:30 pm
- December 29th: 10 am – 8 pm
- December 30th: 10 am – 4:30 pm
- December 31st: Closed
- January 1st: Closed
- January 2nd: Closed
- January 3rd, onward: Regular Hours!
First Municipal Christmas Tree?
Last Friday’s tree lighting ceremony has a long history here in Dundas. It was held for the first time in 1914, and contemporary accounts boast that the tree was the first of its kind in Canada. It has been held yearly since then, with the exception of 2020, due to safety concerns, and was held virtually for 2021. Curiosity begs whether attendees of the 1918 ceremony had similar concerns or whether the deadly flu left as suddenly as it had arrived.
While there are no surviving copies of the programme Santa supposedly arranged to be printed and distributed “so that everybody may obtain a souvenir of the first Municipal Christmas Tree celebration to be held in Canada,” the DMA collection does include the programme from the 2nd Municipal Christmas Tree celebration, held December 23, 1915:
Although it’s difficult to be sure, this celebration may very well have been the first of its kind in Canada. The tradition of the Christmas tree originated in Germany, an older tradition first documented in the sixteenth century. It was adopted by the British after being popularized by the royal family, who had celebrated with one since at least 1800. Canada’s British and German immigrants brought the tradition with them, and evidence suggests the first North American Christmas Tree was hoisted in 1781 for a Quebec party of British and German officers. Electric lighting for these trees wasn’t invented until 100 years later, in 1882, by Edward Johnson of the Edison Electric Company, and available commercially circa 1890 (Canadian Encylopedia). The mayor of Dundas in 1914, W.H.C. Fisher, offers the town to Santa for the day, saying that he has “the freedom of Dundas, the “Hub of Hydro”. Much ado is made about the lights and lighting in the 1915 programme also, suggesting it was still both a novelty and luxury.
There are reports in Canadian newspapers of the 1913 New York City municipal Christmas tree lighting, referencing the success of their first in December 1912, as well as another in Chicago in 1913. If it wasn’t the very first in Canada, Dundas’ 1914 ceremony was certainly among the earliest, as the celebration’s popularity as a public event quickly brought it north of the border. While there were school trees, church trees, hospital trees, and business trees, so far, no references have emerged to an earlier municipal Christmas Tree in Canada.
The second celebration appears to have had a more military theme than the first due to the intensification of WWI, and the programme includes the phrase “Long Live Santa Claus” just above “God Save the King” at the bottom of the page. The event was also a fundraiser/clothing drive for soldiers’ hospitals “as comforts to our wounded soldier lads”, with children encouraged to bring either a monetary or homemade gift for Santa rather than receiving one from their “old friend”. These would be handed over to the “ladies who are doing such noble work”, the Women’s Patriotic League and the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and sent to the front, along with $123 raised by the organizing committee.
Dundas’ Christmas Tree has a 108-year history— may it shine on through another century!