Celebrating Christmas Texas Style
Christmas on the Texas Gulf Coast is a little different. No snow, no cold, and a few other traditions unique to the Lone Star State.
There’s our version of the classic Night Before Christmas to read. The Night Before Christmas in Texas, That Is by Leon A. Harris, This tale has a definite Texas spin with buckboards and bunks. It has entertained Texas audiences for more than forty years.
From the inside cover flap:
A Western Santa Claus-decked out in Levis, a ten-gallon Stetson, a cowboy vest, and with a bandana around his neck-makes his Christmas journey on a buckboard piled high with presents. Swooping in over the prairie to the amazement of sleepy residents and jackrabbits alike, a plump, jovial Santa parks his buckboard outside a peaceful ranch house. From boot-stuffing gifts to the faithful “hosses” pulling his “sleigh,” this is a Christmas tale rich in Texas tradition.
A must-read every holiday if you live in my house.
Gene Autry recorded the poem for Columbia Records in the 1940s or 50s. My copy of the original 78 release is still around somewhere. Take a listen to a later release:
Other Lone Star Christmas traditions are not strictly Texan, but unique to customs of the southern states.
Hanging a pickle on the Christmas tree
Lining our sidewalk with Luminaries
Eating tamales on Christmas Eve
But it’s definitely not Christmas in Texas unless we sing “Merry TEXAS Christmas, You All.”
Gene Autry recorded the song on the flip side of “Night Before Christmas” Click on the link to hear him singing: https://youtu.be/onGs1BaA7co