Christmas trees weren’t a big deal on the Iowa frontier. Not at first, anyway.
For many early settlers, Christmas was quiet. Sometimes it meant church. Sometimes, nothing at all. Winter was hard. Money was tight. There was wood to cut, animals to feed, and snow to shovel. Decorating a tree wasn’t high on the list.
The
truth was, a lot of early Iowans didn’t know what a Christmas tree was. One
widely reprinted explanation in American newspapers during the 1850s tried to
spell it out plainly, calling it “a German custom, recently introduced into
this country, and designed chiefly for the delight of children.”
The idea came west with German immigrants in the 1830s and 1840s, in places like Dubuque, Davenport, and Burlington. Back home, they’d grown up with evergreen trees brought indoors and lit with candles. When they did the same thing in Iowa, their neighbors didn’t know what to think.



