German
American Pioneers...
Professor
Brought Christmas Tree to
New England
200th Anniversary of Charles Follen’s
birth marked this year
By Ken Gewertz, Gazette Staff
December
15, 2011
This
December, as tree lot attendants
load the fragrant, streamlined shapes of netted firs and spruces onto
auto
roof-racks and count out change with fingers numbed by cold, it would
be well
to remember that 1996 is the 200th birthday of the man who brought the
tradition of the decorated Christmas tree to New England.
That
man was Charles Follen
(1796-1840), and besides introducing the Christmas tree at a party at
his
Cambridge home in 1832, he lived an eventful life filled with varied
accomplishments (including a 10-year stint as a Harvard professor) and
marked
by a passionate devotion to the cause of liberty.
“Follen
has left us a legacy of social
action based on the principle of freedom. It’s a principle that we
continue to
test ourselves against,” said Lucinda Duncan, minister of the Follen
Community
Church of East Lexington, the church that Follen founded in 1839.
Born
in Darmstadt, Germany, Follen
came of age under the influence of the Napoleonic Wars and their
repressive
aftermath. He and his generation saw French domination come to an end,
only to
be replaced by a resumption of aristocratic rule instituted by the
Congress of
Vienna.
Idealistic
youths like Follen found
the situation intolerable and expressed their displeasure by organizing
themselves into revolutionary student organizations and agitating for
reform.
When the movement split into two factions, Follen, a very vocal student
leader,
remained solidly with the more radical group, calling for the overthrow
of the
government, by violent means if necessary.
In
the midst of this turmoil, Follen
managed to earn a law degree from the University of Giessen and soon
afterward
became a lecturer at the University of Jena, but his revolutionary past
caught
up with him.
When
a conservative author named
Kotzebue was assassinated, Follen was twice arrested and tried for
conspiracy
in the murder, but the authorities could find no evidence against him.
However,
fearful for his liberty and his life, Follen thought it best to flee
the
country. He went to Basel, then Paris, and finally came to America.
After
less than a year spent learning
English and “networking,” Follen landed a job at Harvard in 1825 as the
College’s first German teacher. He doubled as the instructor of a
subject that
was then coming into vogue, gymnastics. Later, he added history and
ethics to this
busy teaching schedule.
Follen
found the freedom of American
society immensely refreshing and flourished in his adopted country. In
1828 he
married Eliza Lee Cabot, one of the brahmanic Boston Cabots, who, in a
famous
quip, are said to talk only to God.
Through
Eliza, he got to know some of
Boston’s most celebrated figures, including William Ellery Channing, a
leading
Unitarian minister. Under Channing’s influence, Follen began studying
for the
ministry and soon embarked on a preaching career in addition to his
duties at
Harvard.
The
year 1830 was a significant one
for Follen. It was the year he became a naturalized citizen of the
United
States and the year his son, Charles Christopher Follen, was born. This
young
man’s arrival was probably the chief factor leading to Follen’s
introduction of
the Christmas tree.
The
event took place in December 1832.
That is the date of a description by Harriet Martineau, an English
Unitarian
and journalist who was visiting Boston at the time.
Follen,
remembering the German
Christmases of his youth and wishing to recreate the magic and beauty
of a
decorated tree for his young son, went out into the woods near his home
and cut
down a small fir. The tree was set in a tub and its branches hung with
small
dolls, gilded eggshells, and paper cornucopias filled with candied
fruit. The
tree was illuminated with numerous candles.
Martineau
describes the unveiling of
the tree at the Follens’ Christmas party: “It really looked beautiful;
the room
seemed in a blaze, and the ornaments were so well hung on that no
accident
happened, except that one doll’s petticoat caught fire. There was a
sponge tied
to the end of a stick to put out any supernumerary blaze, and no harm
ensued. I
mounted the steps behind the tree to see the effect of opening the
doors. It
was delightful. The children poured in, but in a moment every voice was
hushed.
Their faces were upturned to the blaze, all eyes wide open, all lips
parted,
all steps arrested.”
Follen
was not the first person in
America to have a Christmas tree. Decorated trees had been seen in
Pennsylvania
in the 1820s, and there are reports that Hessian soldiers fighting for
the
British during the Revolution set up Christmas trees in their
encampments. But
there is good evidence that Follen was the first person to bring the
decorated
tree to New England and, after he set the example, the custom spread.
The year
the National Christmas Tree Association projects sales of 37 million
trees.
To
this day, the Follen Community
Church commemorates his introduction of the Christmas tree by lighting
a tree
on its front lawn as well as selling Christmas trees in the lot across
the
street to raise funds for church programs.
And
according to Duncan, the church
also strives to remain true to Follen’s example as a social activist,
an
example that showed no sign of diminishing as Follen matured. As an
American,
Follen took up the fight against slavery as ardently as he had once
fought
against the injustices of European despots.
His
uncompromising abolitionist principles
once lost him a job as pastor of All Souls Church in New York City, and
his
outspoken stand against slavery at a time when abolition was still
highly
controversial, even in Massachusetts, may have ended his teaching
career.
Harvard did not renew his professorship in 1835, but did offer to
employ him as
a German instructor, at a reduced salary. Supporters, including his
wife and
the abolitionist poet John Greenleaf Whittier, later said that it was
his
outspoken views that cost him his Harvard position.
Relieved
of his teaching duties,
Follen became a free agent. He wrote, preached, and lectured widely,
traveling
as far afield as Chicago. In 1839, he received an invitation to preach
to a
small congregation in East Lexington.
Follen
accepted, but left after a
short while to take a more lucrative position as tutor to a family in
Watertown. To fill his position, he recommended a young renegade
Unitarian
minister named Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Follen
returned when the congregation
came up with the money to hire him full time and to build its own
church. He
designed the octagonal church which still stands, laid out so that the
minister
would not be elevated above his parishioners.
Tragically,
Follen did not live to
preach in the church which bears his name. He was killed in 1840 at the
age of
44 in a fire on board the steamship Lexington while crossing Long
Island Sound.
“He
was really a man who left a mark
on this congregation,” said Duncan. “He had a vision of a free
Christian church
where all people could come and speak their minds. It was an idea that
was way
ahead of its time.”
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