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What Is A Christmas Pickle And Where Did It Come From?

The mysterious origin story of this unlikely Christmas tree ornament.

As far as Christmas traditions go, the Weihnachtsgurke, or Christmas pickle, could very well be the weirdest (or at least tied for weirdest with the Christmas spider.) For many families, Christmas morning starts with a hunt for a pickle ornament, deemed the Christmas pickle, on the tree. The first person who finds the pickle gets the first gift, and bragging rights until next Christmas. Read on for the mysterious origin story of the unlikely Christmas tree ornament. Door Xmas Garland

What Is A Christmas Pickle And Where Did It Come From?

Every year, an ornament shaped like a pickle is the last to be hung on the tree. The first child to locate the pickle hidden among the pine needles on Christmas morning gets to open the first present, or for some, receives a special treat.

Most people are under the impression that ye olde Christmas Pickle is a German tradition. Its name alone seems like a pretty dead giveaway, doesn't it? Well, according to The New York Times, the Weihnachtsgurke is all but unknown in Germany. A German polling agency found that 91% of people had never even heard of it. Huh.

So, is the Christmas Pickle German or not? Nobody seems to really know.

The tradition is most popular in the Midwest—Michigan in particular—where there are a lot of German immigrants. In fact, Berrien Springs, Michigan was named the Christmas Pickle Capital of the World, and used to host Christmas pickle festivals each year. Is that how it came to be viewed as a German export? Nobody can be certain.

Not only is its geographic origin a, well, pickle, but people can't even agree on the meaning behind it. However, there are a few legends of how the Christmas pickle came to be.

According to one legend, it was inspired by a German-American soldier who was taken prisoner during the Civil War. Starving, he begged a guard to give him one last pickle before he died. The pity pickle gave him the mental and physical strength to live on.

Another popular story tells the tale of two Spanish boys who were traveling back home for the holidays from boarding school. On their journey, they decided to stop at an inn and were held captive in a pickle barrel by an evil innkeeper. That evening, St. Nicholas stopped at the same inn, found the boys, and freed them.

And then there's the most likely (and least romantic) story, involving a marketing scheme and German glassblowers. In the 1840s, German glassblowers were churning out ornaments shaped like fruits, nuts, and possibly pickles. By the 1880s, F. W. Woolworth Company was importing them and telling their German origin story.

But no matter how you slice, crunch, or stack it, the Christmas Pickle isn't going anywhere anytime soon. And as for where it came from, we care more about where it is now—and being the first to find it.

What Is A Christmas Pickle And Where Did It Come From?

Macrame Wedding Arch Does your family practice the Christmas Pickle tradition? Which origin story do you choose to believe?