 |
| President
George W. Bush and Laura Bush attend the Pageant of
Peace Tree Lighting on the Ellipse near the White
House Thursday, Dec. 5. |

Remarks
by the President at the Pageant of Peace Tree Lighting
Sixty years ago, the holiday season in Washington, D.C. was
overshadowed by a horrible event on December 7, the attack on
Pearl Harbor. Increased security at the White House and the
awareness of America's new war, however, could not dampen the
spirit of the season.
President Roosevelt welcomed a crowd of thousands for the
annual Christmas Eve lighting of the National Christmas Tree.
Americans across the nation listening by radio heard the
President's radiant voice speak words of comfort.
"Against enemies who preach the principles of hate and
practice them, we set our faith in human love and in God's
care for us all men everywhere," said President
Roosevelt.
Then the crowd and radio listeners heard another
distinctive voice-the voice of British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill, whose last visit to the United States was forty
years earlier. The Prime Minister's surprise appearance
boosted the crowd's enthusiasm.
Churchill said, "Let the children have their night of
fun and laughter. Let the gifts of Father Christmas delight
their play. Let us grown-ups share to the full in their
unstinted pleasures before we turn again to the stern task and
formidable years that lie before us, resolved that, by our
sacrifice and daring, these same children shall not be robbed
of their inheritance or denied the right to live in a free and
decent world."
The two leaders of the Allied Forces then joined the crowd
in singing carols and each nation's national anthem.
President Roosevelt had invited Prime Minister Churchill to
the White House for a war council meeting on Christmas Eve.
The meeting was so secretive that President told the First
Lady about the Prime Minister's visit and his guests the day
they were to arrive. The Prime Minister spent the holidays
with the President and the two discussed the challenges to
come.
The National Tree Lighting Ceremony began in 1923 when
President Calvin Coolidge pushed a button to turn on the
lights of a Vermont Balsam fir at a ceremony on the Ellipse
hosted by the community department of Washington D.C.'s public
schools.
The focus of the event expanded into the "Christmas
Pageant of Peace" in 1954. Smaller live trees
representing the 50 states, five territories, and the District
of Columbia, formed a "Pathway of Peace."
Today, the annual ceremony is known as the "Pageant of
Peace" and takes place south of the White House on the
Ellipse. Center to the season's celebration is the living
National Christmas Tree, a Colorado blue spruce from York,
Pennsylvania, planted on the Ellipse October 20, 1978. The
tree stands as a daily reminder of the holiday spirit and of
the tradition each succeeding President has participated in
since 1923.
Past National
Trees at the Pageant of Peace