Sunday, December 23, 2012
Christmas in the Confederate White House - Part 4
FROM: The New York WORLD, Sunday, December 13, 1896:
Written especially for the Sunday World Magazine by Mrs. Jefferson Davis.
Part 4
At last  quiet  settled on the  household  and  the  older members  of  the family began to stuff  stockings  with  molasses candy,  red apples, an orange, small whips plaited by the family with high-colored crackers, worsted reins knitted at home,  paper dolls,  teetotums  made of large horn bottoms and a  match  which could  spin  indefinitely, balls of worsted rags wound  hard  and covered  with old kid gloves, a pair of pretty woolen gloves  for each, either cut of cloth and embroidered on the back or  knitted
by some deft hand out of home-spun wool.  For the President there were a  pair  of  chamois-skin  riding  gauntlets   exquisitely embroidered on the back with his monogram in red and white  silk, made, as the giver wrote, under the guns of Fortress Monroe late at night for fear of discovery.  There was a hemstitched linen handkerchief, with a little sketch in indelible  ink  in  one corner;  the  children  had written him little  letters, their grandmother having held their hands, the burthen of which 
compositions was how they loved their dear father. 
On Christmas morning the children awoke early and came in to see their toys.  They were followed by the negro women, who one after another "caught" us by wishing us a merry Christmas before we  could say it to them, which gave them a right to a gift. Of course, there was a present for every one, small though it  might be,  and one who had been born and brought up at our plantation was  vocal in her admiration of a gay handkerchief. As she left
the room she ejaculated: "Lord knows mistress knows our insides; she jest got the very thing I wanted."
For me there were six cakes of delicious soap, made from the grease of ham boiled for a family at Farmville, a skein of exquisitely fine gray linen thread spun at home, a pincushion  of some  plain  brown cotton material made by some  poor  woman  and stuffed  with  wool  from her pet sheep, and a  little  baby  hat plaited  by the orphans and presented by the industrious  little pain  who  sewed  the straw together. They pushed each other silently to speak, and at last mutely offered the hat, and
considered the  kiss  they gave the sleeping  little one ample reward  for the industry and far above the fruit with which they were laden.   Another present was a fine, delicate little baby frock without an inch of lace or embroidery upon it, but the delicate fabric was set with fairy stitches by the dear invalid neighbor who made it, and it was very precious in my eyes.  There were also a few of Swinburne's best songs bound in wall-paper and a chamois needlebook.
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