Christmas Stuff
Christmas Countdown 12.0
Welcome to the Winter Solstice. ~Vic
From Why Christmas:
The evergreen Fir Tree has traditionally been used to celebrate winter festivals (Pagan and Christian) for thousands of years. Pagans used branches of it to decorate their homes during the winter solstice, as it made them think of the spring to come. The Romans used Fir Trees to decorate their temples at the festival of Saturnalia. Christians use it as a sign of everlasting life with God.

12-05-2020

12-09-2020

12-09-2020

Christmas Star
Image Credit: staffblogs.le.ac.uk
Christmas Countdown 11.0
I did a post on the Old Courthouse back in April. Now, it’s a Gingerbread House. ~Vic
If you’d like to vote:
Homes for the Holidays 2020

12-09-2020
Nice reflection of the Town Tree.
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Christmas Countdown 9.0
Another Gingerbread House submission. I walk past this house every day. It’s nice to see these historical homes being restored. We had another house jacked up on on stilts 18 months ago while the foundation was repaired. ~Vic
If you’d like to vote:
Homes for the Holidays 2020

12-09-2020
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Trick the Eye
12-09-2020
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12-09-2020
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Folk Victorian Home
07-14-2020
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07-21-2020
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for the concrete basement/garage.
12-08-2020
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Christmas Countdown 8.0
Some more natural decorations. ~Vic

12-05-2020

Same Front Yard
12-13-2020
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The Crawford House
12-13-2020
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You can’t see this house from the street.
12-13-2020
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Christmas Countdown 7.0
The next Gingerbread House submission. ~Vic
If you’d like to vote:
Homes for the Holidays 2020

12-09-2020
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07-06-2019
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07-11-2018
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Christmas Countdown 5.0
Another Gingerbread House submission. ~Vic
If you’d like to vote:
Homes for the Holidays 2020

12-05-2020
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1787
05-20-2020
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Christmas Countdown 4.0
It’s story time by the tree. Read to me, please. ~Vic

12-05-2020
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Christmas Countdown 3.0
Another installment of the Gingerbread House submissions. ~Vic
If you’d like to vote:
Homes for the Holidays 2020

12-05-2020
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Site of Edmund Fanning’s House 1762
Eagle Lodge #19 1791
Masonic Lodge #71 1823
Civil War Hospital 1865
04-30-2020
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Christmas Countdown 2.0
Ah-ha! Now we know why there was so much hoarding. ~Vic

12-05-2020
Christmas Countdown
[For the next 15 days, I will be posting pictures of local Christmas stuff as Christmas Day draws near. If anyone wants to participate in their own Christmas Countdown and post local stuff from their area, hit me up with a link back. ~Vic]
Our residents and business owners are participating in a Gingerbread House competition. They are re-creating some of the historic homes and historic buildings. At some point, someone will be doing a re-creation of the Occaneechee Speedway (part of the birth of NASCAR).
There are two categories and you can vote for one favorite in each category:
Homes for the Holidays 2020

12-05-2020
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1881
08-16-2020
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Flashback Friday: Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade 1924

Ninety-six years ago, today, the very first Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was held.
From History Channel:
As the United States prospered during the Roaring Twenties, so did New York City’s iconic department store, Macy’s. After going public in 1922, R. H. Macy & Co. started to acquire competitors and open regional locations. Macy’s flagship store in Manhattan’s Herald Square did such a brisk business that it expanded in 1924 to cover an entire city block, stretching from Broadway to Seventh Avenue along 34th Street.
To showcase the opening of the “World’s Largest Store” and its one million square feet of retail space at the start of the busy holiday shopping season, Macy’s decided to throw New York a parade on Thanksgiving morning. In spite of its timing, the parade was not actually about Thanksgiving at all but the next major holiday on the calendar…Christmas. Macy’s hoped its “Christmas Parade” would whet the appetites of consumers for a holiday shopping feast.
[Previously], the only Thanksgiving parade that had previously passed through the city’s streets was its peculiar, and to many annoying, tradition of children painting their faces and donning tattered clothes to masquerade as “ragamuffins” who asked “Anything for Thanksgiving?” as they begged door-to-door for pennies, apples and pieces of candy.
At [9:00am EST], on the sunlit morning of November 27, 1924, Macy’s gave the children of New York a particularly special Thanksgiving treat as a police escort led the start of the parade from the intersection of 145th Street and Convent Avenue. Macy’s had promised parade-goers “a marathon of mirth” in its full-page newspaper advertisements. While the parade route may not have extended over 26 miles, its 6-mile length certainly made for a long hike for those marching from Harlem to Herald Square.
Although the parade garnered only two sentences the following day in the New York Herald, […] it proved such a smash that Macy’s announced in a newspaper advertisement the following morning that it would stage the parade, again, the following Thanksgiving. “We did not dare dream its success would be so great.”
Macy’s History (NYC Tourist)
Shutterbug Saturday: Christmas Local 2.0

Beautiful home a block away.
Part II of 2018 Christmas reflections.




Registered National Historic Landmark
Built in 1772 by Francis Nash
Was home to William Hooper 1782-90





Foto Friday: Christmas Local

Iron Reindeer & Sled
Foto Friday, local flair…something a little different from Shutterbug Saturday.

Iron Sled & Reindeer in the background.








More to come… ~Vic
30-Day Song Challenge: Day 24

A song by a band you still wish were together…
Oh, the music we have lost.
Far Too Jones (1995-2000)
This was another band out of Raleigh, nicknamed the Tobacco Road Quintet. They also had one album produced by Mammoth Records and got a lot of local airplay. The only reason this band broke up, as best as I can tell, is because they had no label support. They just couldn’t break out of the region, much like what happened to Echo 7 in Myrtle Beach (whom, I know, personally…I may have to put up some of their music one day).
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