Note: I
have been working for two days on an entry for Francis Albert Sinatra’s 100th
birthday and am still not done. Look for
it tomorrow. Better late than
never. In the meantime here is a reprise
of one of my favorite seasonal post and one that resonates with a lot of folks
who grew up in and around Chicago.
I
was thinking about Santa Claus the
other day. Interesting guy. Interesting story behind how a Fourth Century Bishop from Asia Minor ended up sitting on an
elaborate throne in hundreds of American shopping malls posing for pictures
with frightened three year olds. But while pondering that mystery, my mind took
a left turn down a dusty and forgotten road. It does that sometimes.
My
mind drifted back to dark, cold nights in Chicago
in the ‘60’s. Not to
bustling State Street as it was then
with the elaborate holiday windows at
Marshall Field and Carson Pirie
Scott and the throngs of shoppers jostling on the broad side walks as Christmas music played from
loudspeakers. No, my mind drifted to the blue collar neighborhoods—the tidy bungalow belts on the Southwest
and Northwest Sides, the blocks and
blocks of two and three flats jammed cheek to jowl, even to the crumbling,
dangerous ghettos on the West and South Sides.
Up
and down those dark streets thousands and thousands of identical illuminated
plastic Santas sprang up every year in the days just after Thanksgiving on front porches and stoops, in postage stamp front
yards, on balconies and fire escapes, even on garage roofs. All casting
their cheerful, smiling glow onto the soot singed snow. On a lot of
blocks almost every home had one.
From
1964 to 1968 Polk Brothers, a popular local appliance and
furniture store chain, gave away the 5” 2’ tall illuminated Jolly Santas with every major
purchase. Offered as an alternative was a smiling, caroling Snowman originally intended for Jewish customers. Many folks came
back and added the Snowman in subsequent years. In those four years more
than 250,000 of the Santas alone were given away. No wonder they were
ubiquitous.
Polk
Brothers was the kind of operation that advertised in the Sunday Funnies and on radio and
TV. Their stores were not in
the Loop but on artery avenues of
the neighborhoods themselves. In the days before everyone had a Visa or a Master Charge card and when the snooty downtown department stores
were stingy on credit for blue collar families, Polk Brothers trusted their
customers to take home the merchandise and pay “on time.” Ladies in
babushkas and men in grimy work clothes would climb on busses after every pay
day and count out payments of $5 or $10 to service desks at the stores.
That’s
how families whose parents lived in cold water flats and boarding houses, got
that refrigerator, color TV set, or the whole suite of living room
furniture—sofa, love seat, end tables, coffee tables and lamps—for $199.
No wonder they loved Polk Brothers. And Polk Brothers loved them back
with all of those free Santas and Snowmen.
It
made for such an utterly American Christmas—crass, commercial, to the
sophisticated eye vulgar and tasteless, yet full of love and joy, and perhaps
most of all hope. The very angels could not have sung on high with
greater hope and gladder tidings than those goofy stoop Santas.
Driving
down those same streets almost 50 years later you can still sometimes spot a
survivor glowing in the dark, his red suit faded, his white beard yellowed,
perhaps cracked and even mended with tape. I like to imagine that behind
the bungalow door is an old couple who, when their children were babies first
put that Santa out. And that maybe, just maybe, he is a beacon now to
draw those long grown children and their children and maybe even their children
for one more Merry Christmas home.
Patrick this piece struck such a delightful memory of growing up on the South side in Park Manor at 73rd and Michigan Ave. And yes my mom and dad furnished our home in the bungalow belt as did our neighbors. Thank you!
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