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Published by the Department of Public Affairs, City of St. Augustine. Florida                   December 21 2010

St. Augustine in the Holiday Spirit

Decorating . . .

 

deMesa tours

   Colonial Christmas is featured daily at the Colonial Spanish Quarter's de Mesa House through January 9.

   You'll find de Mesa House spruced up with holiday decorations of earlier times, and guided tours throughout the day with Joseph and Mary Stout (historic interpreters Brad Taylor-Hicks and Gili Lochner), residents of deMesa House in the late 1700s.

   Hours are Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday noon to 4 p.m., with scheduled tours at 11 a.m. and 1, 2:30, and 3:30 p.m. from the Spanish Quarter entrance.

   Spanish Quarter admission charged, but St. Johns County residents always free with identification. Details 904.825.1083 or visit the city website.

North City foliage

  Yes Yankees,

 Foliage - Here!

   

    Not the seasonal red of poinsettia, but a maple tree blazing in the morning sun in North City warms the hearts of transplanted northerners wistful for annual fall foliage - just before that season of snow shoveling . . .

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and caroling . . .

   "The Voice of Lincolnville," Carrie Johnson and friends bring holiday carols and cheer tonight to The Sisters of St. Joseph, Buckingham Smith Assisted Living Center, Samantha Wilson/Bayview Senior Centers, and St. Francis House, beginning at 5 p.m. from Galimore Center on a courtesy St. Augustine Red Tour Train.

   To brighten seniors' holidays, seasonal cards designed by community youngsters will be given to each resident.

 

and stocking stuffing . . .

     A very practical gift for friends and family visiting downtown - a book of parking coupons for the Historic Downtown Parking Facility.  Twenty-five all day (7 a.m.-11 p.m.) coupons at a cost of $3.75 each - half the price of regular all-day parking.

   There's also the two hour free coupons booklet, and of course prepaid ParkNow cards. Get the details on the city website.

 

and planning for 2011. . .

   A new, user-friendly, City Calendar is now posted on the city website, featuring scheduled meetings and city affairs.  

   The clickable calendar lets you go to board agendas and websites to keep up with city affairs.

   This latest addition to the city website follows recent upgrades that provide links to proposed ordinances from City Commission agendas.

and serving

     More than 100 homeless persons and families joined in annual Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners with theDinner for homeless Emergency Services and of Homeless Coalition of St. Johns County and St. Francis House at First United Methodist Church.

   The December 16 dinner was part of a Candlelight Vigil and Memorial Service observing National Homeless Persons' Memorial Day.

   Among other traditional gatherings: Thanksgiving Day meals for the homeless, hosted by the Church of HopeDinner for police and Deliverance at Ketterlinus Gymnasium, and Christmas Day dinner at noon hosted by Labor Ready at Prosperity Bank Community Center on North Ponce de Leon Boulevard (US 1).

   December 16 was also the annual Lincolnville Crime Watch appreciation holiday fest at the Galimore Center, recognizing the city's police, firefighters, and paramedics.

The Night Before Christmas

      Was it Clement Clarke Moore's creation?

 

   For almost 180 years, families have loved and shared the joyous poem of Christmas with their families. The poem, A Visit from St. Nicholas, more commonly known as 'Twas the Night Before Christmas, has been a classic since its first appearance in the Troy Sentinel in 1823. The poem was published anonymously and, as excitement over the verses grew, everyone wanted to know the name of the author. Henry LivingstonClement Clarke Moore

   In 1837 Clement Clarke Moore, a biblical scholar in New York City, allowed his name to be attached as author and, in 1844, he included the piece in his own book, Poems. Moore explained that he had written the poem on the Christmas Eve of 1823.

   But there was a problem.

   For at least fifteen years before the poem saw the light of a Troy New York day, by 1808 at the latest, a group of children had been listening to Henry Livingston read them the poem.

   Whether Henry, dead by the time Moore took credit for the poem, would have cared for the fame and attention is doubtful. Whether he would have appreciated someone appropriating his work, though, is a completely different thing.

   For over a century and a half, those who remembered have passed on the story to the next generation. Descendants collected one another's memories in the hopes that some stray thread would be found that could be pulled on, and maybe, just maybe, unravel the curtain preventing their story from emerging.

   But for all that time, and all that effort, the Livingston descendants failed to make a case strong enough to put up against the word of the son of the Rector of New York City's Trinity Church.

   There was no smoking gun. The original in Henry's handwriting had burned in a Wisconsin fire.   

   What it took was someone who could look at the problem from a completely new point of view. A literary detective who could trace the origin of writing styles.

   The rest of the story is here.

History's Highlight   

       St. Augustine, December 24, 1702

One in a series of historic features for our 450th, researched by George Gardner

 

4 years, 8 months, 19 days to St. Augustine's 450th anniversary 

      

Christmas Eve, 49 days into the British siege on St. Augustine.

Some 1,500 are huddled inside the protective walls of the massive Castillo de San Marcos, including "all priests, friars, women, children, Negro slaves, free Negroes and all Indians of whatever nation which have rendered obedience to his Catholic Majesty."

Castillo de San MarcosForty-nine days since Governor Joseph de Zuniga y Zerda issued his proclamation: "The enemy is approaching by land and by sea and they are bringing the means to attack and besiege the royal fort."

Forty-nine days of constant pounding of cannon balls against the fortress walls - ineffectively absorbed into the soft coquina.   

Forty-nine days of building siege trenches along the expanse of the fort's defensive glacis, ever closer to the target.

Now the English await mortars, able to lob deadly missiles over the walls and onto the crowded grounds, while the Spanish await a relief fleet from Havana.

Christmas Eve. Two sails are sighted. They are English. Morale inside the fort hits bottom. The ships have not come from Jamaica; they do not carry the dreaded mortars. But the defenders don't know this.

The governor focuses on morale: A Christmas Eve party for all and bonuses for the troops. His accountants say the treasury can't afford it. The governor replies, "Charge it to next year's account!"

Two days later, four sails are sighted on the southern horizon. As they near, they are identified as men-of-war. Finally, the welcome report: They are Spanish, the relief fleet from Havana.

The sight of the Spanish fleet is enough to make the English retreat. Deciding a retreat by sea would be stopped by the fleet, the English destroy their own ships and flee on foot.

December 29, 1702, after 54 days of siege, the St. Augustine garrison can finally celebrate Christmas.

The St. Augustine Report is published by the Department of Public Affairs of the City of St. Augustine each Tuesday and on Fridays previewing City Commission meetings. The Report is written and distributed by George Gardner, former St. Augustine Mayor (2002-2006) and Commissioner (2006-2008) and a longtime newspaper reporter and editor.  Contact The Report at gardner@aug.com