Mid-Century Christmas: Fads and Facts from 1945-1970

White box in the center says Home for the Holidays. The background is of a retro wrapping paper, dark green dots on a light green background.

About This Event

READY TO WANDER DOWN MEMORY LANE? Christmas in America from the 1940s through the 1960s meant aluminum trees, department store Santas, and cartoon specials on TV. Every kid in the suburbs had to have an Easy-Bake Oven, a G.I. Joe, or a Slinky. The coolest houses had rotating color wheels for their trees. Historian Leslie Goddard explores this optimistic era in a new illustrated lecture, using photographs, advertisements, greeting cards, and catalogs to explore why this era was a turning point for how we celebrate the holidays.

Register now for this Zoom program!

This program is part of our virtual "Home for the Holidays" series. Click to view all six programs!

Department

Libraries

Category

Public Programs
Winter Celebrations

Audience

Adults & Seniors
December 09, 2024
6:30 pm to 7:30 pm
FREE

Location

This is held virtually.