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December 1, 2019
Hugh and Clare Delmore were home this past weekend for Thanksgiving, and while home they assisted in setting up the crèche pictured above.
The Nativity set has a long history in our family, and my children roll their eyes as they hear this story every year!
The year is 1930, 9 year old Bob Delmore and his sister, 7 year old Denise are quarantined in their south Minneapolis home with Scarlet Fever. It is Christmas season and their mother, Nora, realizes it is a terrible time to keep her children in seclusion. Her remedy for visiting Santa and Christmas shopping is to give each child one selection from the Sears catalogue. It is depression time and the selections have to be kept within a certain range.
Bob chose a Nativity set of Plaster of Paris figures; Mary and Joseph, three Wiseman, shepherd and assorted stable animals as well as the camels for the kings. Baby Jesus and his manger were made of wax. Years later the stable would be handmade and added to the set which was a part of the Christmas celebration at Bob and Margaret’s home for decades.
The figures have held up quite well for 90 years, the cloaks on Joseph and the Wise men are checked, and unfortunately the wax Baby Jesus and crèche melted in the hot attic in the 60’s. I bought my dad a Christmas present that year at the Friendship Shop in Miracle Mile, and the Christ Child is now 50 years and counting. One original camel is still displayed, the others have crumbled away and are not leg-worthy! Bob’s Nativity set has been a part of Christmas decorations at the Dan Delmore home for the past 25 years.
Christmas traditions were carefully maintained by Bob Delmore. The tree went up only during Advent, usually about the 2nd week and came down on the Feast of the Epiphany, the end of the Christmas liturgical season. Presents were opened on Christmas Eve, not in the morning, and many years we would go driving around the area to look at Christmas lights.
Bob was also a funeral director which meant that most years he was also at work. We would patiently wait on Christmas Eve for his return, one year so many people died that evening that we never opened the packages until the 26th, Boxing Day in England! I never heard him complain, nor did our mother Margaret who would explain to us that in some families it would not be a very happy Christmas that year.
No matter how busy the day would get, there was always a delightful Christmas in our home. Christmas cookies, packages, visiting grandparents and having them over for Christmas dinner, the family going to Midnight Mass, waking in pre-dawn to see if Santa left what you were hoping for under the tree. I never recall being disappointed.
I hope your family has many traditions that have been carried on over the years. Perhaps you have started some new ones that will live on with your children and grandchildren after you are gone. If the Wise men cloaks hold out, my wish is that one of my children will continue to display the 1930 Nativity set long after I am gone.
-Dan Delmore, owner of Gearty-Delmore Funeral Chapels
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