Birmingham Christmas tree: Difference between revisions

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In [[1963]] retailer [[Ferd Weil]] and the [[Downtown Action Committee]] expanded the decorating to additional streets, each given their own theme. [[1st Avenue North|1st Avenue]] was "Christmas Carol Lane", [[2nd Avenue North|2nd Avenue]] was "Candle Light Lane", [[3rd Avenue North|3rd Avenue]] was "Christmas Scroll Lane", [[19th Street North|19th Street]] became the new "Santa Claus Lane" and 20th Street gained a regiment of giant toy soldiers. The living tree in the park, damaged by the decorating process, was replaced with a new tree in [[1966]]. To avoid damaging the new tree, lights and ornaments were hung from a steel frame erected around the tree.
In [[1963]] retailer [[Ferd Weil]] and the [[Downtown Action Committee]] expanded the decorating to additional streets, each given their own theme. [[1st Avenue North|1st Avenue]] was "Christmas Carol Lane", [[2nd Avenue North|2nd Avenue]] was "Candle Light Lane", [[3rd Avenue North|3rd Avenue]] was "Christmas Scroll Lane", [[19th Street North|19th Street]] became the new "Santa Claus Lane" and 20th Street gained a regiment of giant toy soldiers. The living tree in the park, damaged by the decorating process, was replaced with a new tree in [[1966]]. To avoid damaging the new tree, lights and ornaments were hung from a steel frame erected around the tree.


Since the park was renovated and reopened as [[Linn Park]], a cut tree has been brought in each year for seasonal display. A 35-foot-tall Norwegian spruce, grown in North Carolina, was put up in [[2010]]. It was destroyed by a fire caused by copper thieves attempting to remove the copper wiring from the lights.
Since the park was renovated and reopened as [[Linn Park]], a cut tree has been brought in each year for seasonal display. The 35-foot-tall North Carolina-grown Norwegian spruce put up in [[2010]] was destroyed by a fire caused by thieves attempting to remove the copper wiring from the lights.


Other notable public trees in Birmingham include the enormous tree graphic occupying one facade of the 20-story [[Regions_Center#Christmas|Regions Center]] building, and a small tree launched on a floating platform into the pond at the [[Railroad Park]] in [[2010]]. In the late 1950s, additional "trees" shaped from lights adorned [[Vulcan Park]] and the south side of the [[Alabama Power Building]].
Other notable public trees in Birmingham include the enormous tree graphic occupying one facade of the 20-story [[Regions_Center#Christmas|Regions Center]] building, and a small tree launched on a floating platform into the pond at the [[Railroad Park]] in [[2010]]. In the late 1950s, additional "trees" shaped from lights adorned [[Vulcan Park]] and the south side of the [[Alabama Power Building]].

Revision as of 14:00, 15 December 2010

The 2005 Birmingham Christmas Tree at Linn Park

This is a list of Birmingham Christmas trees, displayed publicly in the city:

The official "Birmingham Christmas Tree" was a live tree planted at Woodrow Wilson Park in 1959. It anchored the northern end of what promoters called "Santa Claus Lane" (20th Street North between the park and Morris Avenue, which was lit by thousands of lights. For a number of years a sleigh-shaped parade float, driven by Bull Connor, would make a nightly circuit down the length of Santa Claus Lane and back, pulling kids and local children's TV personalities.

In 1963 retailer Ferd Weil and the Downtown Action Committee expanded the decorating to additional streets, each given their own theme. 1st Avenue was "Christmas Carol Lane", 2nd Avenue was "Candle Light Lane", 3rd Avenue was "Christmas Scroll Lane", 19th Street became the new "Santa Claus Lane" and 20th Street gained a regiment of giant toy soldiers. The living tree in the park, damaged by the decorating process, was replaced with a new tree in 1966. To avoid damaging the new tree, lights and ornaments were hung from a steel frame erected around the tree.

Since the park was renovated and reopened as Linn Park, a cut tree has been brought in each year for seasonal display. The 35-foot-tall North Carolina-grown Norwegian spruce put up in 2010 was destroyed by a fire caused by thieves attempting to remove the copper wiring from the lights.

Other notable public trees in Birmingham include the enormous tree graphic occupying one facade of the 20-story Regions Center building, and a small tree launched on a floating platform into the pond at the Railroad Park in 2010. In the late 1950s, additional "trees" shaped from lights adorned Vulcan Park and the south side of the Alabama Power Building.

References

  • Hollis, Tim (December 2010) "A Growing Tradition: Downtown Christmas trees have long brought a holiday spirit to Birmingham." Birmingham magazine. p. 40
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (December 15, 2010) "Copper thieves burn down City of Birmingham's Christmas tree." Birmingham News