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  Texas : Features : Columns : All Things Historical :

New Year’ Day

by Archie P. McDonald
Archie McDonald Ph.D.

Happy New Year! Many dates and symbols have marked the waning of the old and welcoming the new year, but the most difficult thing has been getting a majority of us to agree when to observe the passage.

Early peoples associated the new year with completion of a harvest and purifying of food that insured the continuation of life, so the vernal equinox, or March 25 under the ancient calendar, provided a common date for observance. Others used the summer solstice, or some date deemed appropriate to their culture.

The Romans first used January 1 to begin the new year in 153 B.C., but several centuries were required to sort out the calendar, as ordered by Julius Caesar, to make it appear more or less as it does today. In the beginning, this was simply the first day when new consuls took office in Rome.

Christian Europe clung to March 25 as their special day of renewal until Pope Gregory XIII decreed the adoption of a new calendar in 1582 that accepted January 1 as the appropriate date to commence a new year. Protestants gradually accepted the same date—Germany in 1700, Great Britain in 1752, and Sweden in 1753; even Japan and China did so in 1873 and 1912, for business purposes, despite its association with Christianity.

Ancient rites associated with the New Year included purging and purification, extinguishing and rekindling fires, masked processions, fights between opposing teams, and an interlude of Carnival—excessive drinking. Many of those features survive.

At one time the event featured the giving of gifts; in Rome and in Elizabethan England, this was a kind of annual “tribute” to the emperor or king. Eventually the Germany influence moved most of the gift giving to Christmas. It was also a time for dropping by the homes of friends who prepared by having buffets of food and drink ready.

A special feature in America has been the Tournament of Roses in Pasadena, California, begun in 1886 by the Valley Hunt Club. The first football contest associated with the day occurred in 1902 (Michigan walloped Stanford, 49-0), but chariot races were held the next year, and the regular Rose Bowl football game did not begin until 1916.

Long before our time America set its own “standards” for New Year’s, many more associated with New Year’s Eve: Guy Lombardo And His Royal Canadians “coming to you live from the Ambassador Hotel;” the falling electric ball on Times Square; parties with dancing and champagne at midnight; blowing horns and utilizing other racket makers; license, almost a duty, to hug or kiss everyone within reach; and rigging up some older man to look like Father Time to get booted out of the way by a fresh bediapered youngster. All, in their way, celebrating survival and expectation. Then, the next day, survivors watch football, football, and football.

How will you observe the passage? I can recall a New Year’s Eve camping when we seemed to be the only living creatures on the earth, and blowing the car horn that only we could hear; dancing and staying the night at Hotel Fredonia in Nacogdoches; a splendid evening at Cawtawa Mountain Lodge in northern Georgia when the telephone crew from Atlanta set the pace and had more fun than middle aged folks usually are allowed.

However you observe the day and its eve, be safe, and cheer for my teams in the bowl games. You’ll know which ones—they will be losing.

© Archie P. McDonald
All Things Historical
December 24, 2007 column
A syndicated column in over 70 East Texas newspapers
(The East Texas Historical Association provides this column as a public service. Archie P. McDonald is director of the Association and author of more than 20 books on Texas.)
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Texas
Primary Source Accounts of the Civil War
William Barrett Travis
 
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A timely gift for any East Texan. Sample a little of East Texas here, a little there--and come away with a good helping of stories you might not know if you didn’t read this book.
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