The history of American Halloween

113,149
0
Published 2023-10-24
The history of American Halloween. Let's talk about its strange roots in the late 19th century. Video sponsored by ‪@SurfsharkAcademy‬ Get an exclusive @Surfshark deal! Enter promo code JJMCC for an extra 3 months free at surfshark.deals/jjmcc

SUBSCRIBE: youtube.com/jjmccullough?sub_confirmation=1

In addition to "Halloween in America," by Stuart Schneider, I also relied on the excellent book "Pumpkin: The Curious History of an American Icon" by Cindy Ott

FOLLOW ME:

🇨🇦Support me on Patreon! www.patreon.com/jjmccullough
🤖Join my Discord! discord.gg/3X64ww7
🇺🇸Follow me on Instagram! www.instagram.com/jjmccullough/
🇨🇦Read my latest Washington Post columns: www.washingtonpost.com/people/jj-mccullough
🇨🇦Visit my Canada Website thecanadaguide.com/

Some music by:
Craig Henderson-    / @craighendersonmusic  
ComradeF- youtube.com/c/ComradeF,


All Comments (21)
  • @calboy2
    5000 videos, 5000 awards. This guy is killing it
  • The shade thrown at Europe's "crappy little vegetable lanterns" compared to the "so much better" pumpkin ones is hilarious haha
  • @randomvids12347
    Not sure if you've seen it but the mini series "over the garden wall" has been a traditional viewing with my friends for years now which references so many of these classic Halloween tropes that were super interesting to hear the origins of!
  • @TheFinalDemon117
    I don't really care about mispronunciation of words if it's not your native language because languages are hard and people try their best but the fact that you pronounced Samhain correctly made me unexpectedly very happy.
  • @BladeRedwind
    Would LOVE if you did a breakdown on the history of creepy Victorian Christmas cards.
  • @lisak7380
    Any excuse for a party is an old American tradition.
  • @Ajv516
    It is such a relief to hear someone admit “No one knows. It be like that.” Especially when discussing cultural history. It’s partly why I get frustrated with the weird, contemporary phobia of cultural diffusion. It’s something we all do over time and there’s nothing inherently wrong about that.
  • @tcm81
    The Scottish version of Halloween seems to have been more about young people getting together in a sort of courting ritual. The Robert Burns poem 'Halloween' describes a number of the 'magical' rituals that took place. The author explains a number of these in the footnotes to the poem. This is footnote 8: "Burning the nuts is a favorite charm. They name the lad and lass to each particular nut, as they lay them in the fire; and according as they burn quietly together, or start from beside one another, the course and issue of the courtship will be."
  • @bagelman2634
    I’m surprised you didn’t talk about The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, since that’s one of the most iconic old Halloween stories in America.
  • What always gets me how recent these seemingly longstanding traditions are. Christmas is one of course, but Halloween is even more recent. There haven't even been 100 "traditional" Halloweens celebrated yet.
  • @SpiralSine6
    A JJ video? On a weekday? Quite spooky indeed!
  • @icefrout
    While it seems a lot of the traditions of Halloween are similar in age to those of Christmas, it might be interesting to contrast the statuses of their "cultural canons". You've mentioned that the Christmas "cultural canon" has mostly shut now, having gotten a lot of the bulk of it immediately after WW2. Halloween meanwhile seems to have newer iconic facets like '80s slashers, "Nightmare Before Christmas" and the remix of "Spooky Scary Skeletons".
  • @_sibley
    The amount of detail dedicated to those "parties" images at 6:47, despite being only 10 seconds of content, is why all of J.J.'s videos are award-winning. Also the squeaky toy noise at 15:48.
  • The witch switch is interesting, because for centuries upon centuries witches were depicted as beautiful, like Circe, Sybil, and Medea. That was part of their power, being so beautiful they could "bewitch" you. By MacBeth we have old crones that are women but not look like it.
  • @batzcat
    I applaud you for not feeding us some BS about the witches hat. I cant tell you how many times I look stuff up that I "learned" from Youtube only to find it wasn't actually true 😅
  • The YouTube channel Tasting History with Max Miller does a Halloween episode where he makes a homemade vintage vinegar candy (yes I know) and he delves into the history of some modern Halloween traditions and what some kids would do for “tricks” in the US. It’s a wonderful video/channel. Highly recommend his work
  • the pointy hat thing could have something to do with jewish stereotypes in fairytales, medieval jews in europe used to wear pointy hats. I know this may also be the origin of wizard hats so im wondering if its the same situation
  • @legomann4345
    I love all this old timey turn of the century fall stuff! It really puts you in the halloween and thanksgiving spirit
  • @leontrotsky7816
    My theory on witches' hats is that they probably come from the kind of tall, but non-pointy hats a lot of people used to wear in the 16th/17th centuries anyway. That was the peak of the witch craze.
  • @Hookly
    Great video, but I would offer a correction that November 1 is still All Saints Day in the Roman Catholic Calendar. It’s a holiday not often widely celebrated culturally in places like the US and Canada, but is still a holiday nonetheless. Also, the scheduling is significant because the date was moved from the spring/summer (8 weeks after Easter)