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Christmas / Holiday 2019: Shares a historic 1929 Christmas sentiment letter from Philip and Georgiana Yarrow of Morgan Park

Merry Christmas from the Ridge Historical Society!

A nice historic Christmas sentiment was discovered by RHS President Elaine Spencer while she was looking through a house file. It was written in 1929 by Philip Yarrow who was the minister for the Morgan Park Congregational Church, and his wife Georgiana. The Yarrows lived in the big Queen Anne-style house probably recognized by most people familiar with Longwood Drive, just south of 111th Street where Lothair splits off to the southwest. Here is a picture of the letter and the house the Yarrows lived in. Linda Lamberty, RHS Historian transcribed the letter as follows:

“We are sitting around the Christmas Tree again. Children grown and gone. Just living over again tonight the days when Childhood’s Christmas joys brought to our hearts’ delights, immeasurably sweet and deep.

What a possession a child is, humbling, inspiring, strengthening, ennobling. Now we miss the children which this Christmas Tree symbolizes tonight.

They say that it is a waste to cut down this tree. If God took a thousand years to grow our tree, this tree is worth all His labor. Once growing on a hillside, now more alive than ever in our home.

See that old stuffed Santa Claus perched on a top limb? Mother bought that twenty years ago at Field’s. See that little tinsel ship? Mother bought that one Christmas Eve when she rushed out on North Clark Street and spent every cent she had left to make the Children happy. Look at all those balloons and globes, red and yellow and blue and green. Did Titian ever paint a lovelier picture? This tree is alive. The sparkle of the tinselled beauty is telling tonight some marvelous tales of memory when children looked and wondered. Oh, the mystic loveliness of this Christmas Tree!

Getting old and looking backward? Oh, no! Just the musing of a moment. We look forward with our dear friends to a greater tomorrow and would pray that together with you we may enter a New Year with hearts aglow with richer hope. The sands of time sink slowly but life with God under the guiding light of his son, Jesus Christ, becomes year by year higher, fuller, finer and more joyous.

Look, the logs in our hearth are blazing tonight with a strange brilliance! The Tree tells of yesterday. The hearth speaks of the joy we have in the warmth of friendships today and tomorrow. To our friends of all faiths, as we sit in the radiance of the Christmas Tree and the glow of the friendly hearth, a Happy New Year.

Philip Yarrow

Georgiana Yarrow

Christmas Night 1929”