A Long Ago Christmas Memory
by Patricia Crisafulli
The old farm on a dirt road in the backwoods of northern New York State was described to me so many times, I can imagine the place, even though I never saw it: the big frame house with the wide porch, the pair of maple trees out front, and the barn in the back where my grandparents kept a cow or two, pigs and chickens, and a team of work horses.
That old house came alive for me in dozens of stories that my mother told, of how she and her sisters grew up there during the Depression. The stories had that long-ago feel not only because of the years that had passed, but also because of the era: tales of riding in a horse and buggy in the summer and a horse and sleigh in the winter. My grandfather owned an old Model A Ford, but the tires were patched beyond repair and there was no money for gasoline.
One story that has always stayed with me was of a particular Christmas in the early 1930s, a time my mother remember as the “depths of the Depression,” and there was no money. In order to pay the interest on the mortgage, to keep the bank from foreclosing on the farm, my grandfather needed a relatively small sum. The amount I remember being told was $13, but for the little they had in those days it might as well have been $13,000.
Tested by trouble and sorrows, my grandparents relied on their deep and abiding faith. As Psalm 34 tells us, I sought the Lord, and he answered me, and delivered me from all my fears. The answer to their prayers was to be found right in their own backyard with gifts of the earth. My grandmother went into the woods to gather bushel baskets full of ground pine, with green sprouts like miniature boughs that spread in great patches along the earth. From willow branches she made hoops, around which she bound the ground pine to make wreathes.
She sat up all night making wreaths, enough to fill a large hamper basket, which my grandfather strapped to his back. At four in the morning, he hopped a ride on the milk train into Syracuse, where he went door-to-door selling wreathes. Night after night, my grandmother made wreaths, and day after day my grandfather sold them.
As Christmas approached, my grandmother had saved coupons that came in tins of coffee to get a Kewpie doll for her daughters. The only other things she gave them were mittens she knit herself.
Then on Christmas Eve, my grandfather came home from the last day of selling wreaths, exhausted but relieved. The farm was safe for another year. From what he had earned, he had a dime left over, which he spent on his beloved wife to buy her a powder puff. That night, my grandmother gave him her surprise: enough money from selling butter and eggs all year to buy four new tires for the Model A Ford.
Hearing this story as a child, my head was too full of the Sears & Roebuck “Wish Book” catalog to really comprehend it. As an adult, I try to fathom living with no money at all. What lingers in my heart, however, is the love of my grandparents for each other: the dashing young American soldier in World War I and the beautiful French girl he met overseas and then returned to her country to marry.
Many years, thousands of miles, and untold hardships later, that love continued. During a very dark December, they found a way together to keep the farm and the family together. And so it would always be for them.
Patricia Crisafulli is a writer, published author, and founder of www.FaithHopeandFiction.com, a monthly e-literary magazine with stories, essays, and poetry to inspire and entertain.






Please count me in.
simplystacieblog at gmail dot com
We were never that poor on the farm, but we had to stretch our monies. My mother made a lot of my dresses. The boys had to wear hand-me-downs. This is a VERY touching story. Thanks for sharing. Today, many don't know how hard life was here at one time. It still is for some.
desertrose5173 at gmail dot com
What a beautiful story, Patricia! Wouldn't it be wonderful if we all remembered the simple, heartfelt gifts are just as precious – if not more so.
This was so lovely! It brought tears to my eyes.
Thank you for sharing.
moondeth at gmail dot com
What a beautiful story…certainly one with a very important message given today's economy! Love & family are what's important, not our 'wish lists'.
I love this story. Thank you for sharing your families memories with us.
I am a follower of your blogs and do enjoy them.
Please add me for the drawing.
And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.
1 Corinthians 13:13
fighting for my life the last 3 yrs from inoperable spinal tumors, you can imagine the challenges I face. But I always remind myself each morning, if He has chosen to keep you HE PROVIDES A WAY.
I had the joy many years ago to have a couple days in the presence of Sabina and Pastor Richard Wurmbrand. (authros of Tortured for Christ). The joy that eminated from their faces was beyond description.( even in pain and heartache..)(pastor Wurmbrand could not even wear shoes on his feet they were still so painful form many yrs of torture int he prisons,many many yrs before..and yet,… they were so filled with HIS PRESENCE, and love that you could only share the same with them. They laughed like children in the backseat of the car with my 10 yr old daughter and shared candy with her, teasing her as if she were their own, and lifelong friends, without a care… sometimes my own physical pain form the tumors pressing on my spinal cord is so strong I think I can bear no more,… and then I think of His promises… and GOD PROVIDES A WAY!..
Many blessings and hopes have been given to us. We jsut have to see and hear from His vantage point.
cathy b
projecthope7 at gmail dot com