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  • From satellite, you can spot them in the green speckles.

  • Christmas Tree Farm.

  • Christmas Tree Farm. Christmas tree far- Actually, that's Mount Rushmore.

  • Christmas Tree Farm. Let's get to it.

  • Why do people have Christmas trees in their house?

  • They aren't in the Christian Bible.

  • And it's such a new tradition that only one of these four guys had one in the White House.

  • The real story of Christmas trees involves a lost Grand Duchy, 1840 influencers,

  • and the unlikely birth of a custom you can see from space.

  • Christmas tree like stuff has been going on for a while,

  • as imagined in this picture of the pagan Roman Saturnalia.

  • But by the 1500s and 1600s, it had become a Germanic custom

  • that included this song about how awesome fir trees are. (O Tannenbaum plays)

  • It was

  • big in northern states, including the Duchy, where Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz was from.

  • Charlotte was a princess from a relative backwater, but that didn't stop her from marrying Britain's King George

  • the Third, the guy who most Americans know for losing to America.

  • With her, Charlotte brought the German tradition of hanging a yew branch in the living room.

  • And later she also put up a Christmas tree.

  • But Christmas trees were still mainly a weird German thing.

  • It took a new era to bring the Christmas tree mainstream.

  • This is a diary entry from Charlotte's granddaughter, Queen Victoria, when she was a 13 year old girl.

  • If you can't read it, it saysall the presents being placed round the tree.”

  • That entry is from 1832.

  • So the Christmas tree was a royal custom already, thanks to Charlotte, but it was reinforced

  • by Victoria's 1840 marriage to her German cousin, Prince Albert.

  • This kicked off perfect conditions for the Christmas tree to go worldwide.

  • In America, booming German immigration in the 1840s added a huge German cultural influence to the United States.

  • At the same time, in England, Christmas was becoming a more significant holiday with Charles Dickens

  • “A Christmas Carol,” some of the first Christmas cards,

  • and publishers like the Illustrated London News defining mass Media with huge circulations.

  • In 1848, they printed this illustration of Albert and Victoria around their beautiful Christmas tree.

  • This picture was like a match to the spread of German Christmas around the world.

  • In America, it even showed up in an influential women's magazine two years later, albeit with some 1840s

  • Photoshopping.

  • See how Albert's mustache and Victoria's tiara are gone?

  • As early as 1850 in America, the Christmas tree trade

  • was profitable, as traders brought them from the country into the city.

  • The Christmas tree didn't have a flawless ride.

  • Teddy Roosevelt, for one, didn't like them because they were a waste of trees.

  • His son had to sneak one into a White House closet.

  • but it became a tradition in houses big and small.

  • It's a custom that Queen Charlotte from Mecklenburg-Strelitz brought with her to England.

  • And it goes on today.

  • Just outside Charlotte, North Carolina, in Mecklenburg County, you'll find Christmas tree farms

  • that you can see from space.

From satellite, you can spot them in the green speckles.

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