9th Day Christmas Past Winner and Answer

Posted by on Dec 10, 2020 in Christmas Past Re-Cast 2020 |

Answer 9th Day Christmas Past Re-cast: President Grant said that while he had never kept track of the number of books he had given away, he believed that the number would be just about one hundred thousand volumes. Congrats to 9th Day drawing winner, BONNIE COTTAM, who won a white Bethlehem baby blanket (made in Tel Aviv), Dead Sea lotion, and embroidered bag (Palestinian cultural design made by a Bedouin seamstress)- $65 value! Please contact MHA office 801-272-5601 or info@mormonheritage.com within 30 days to arrange for how to receive your prize.  Story still available on yesterday’s...

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9th Day Christmas Past Re-cast Question & Story

Posted by on Dec 9, 2020 in Christmas Past Re-Cast 2020 | 20 comments

On the 9th Day of Christmas Past Re-cast…  Question: Today’s “Light the World” is to send words of love through books.   How many books did Pres. Heber J. Grant give away especially at Christmas time? To be entered into today’s daily giveaway & FREE tour drawing- Read the story below; “Comment” & “Share” your answer on Facebook or our blog.  Click Here for contest rules. PRESIDENT HEBER J. GRANT – Books, Books, Books! Heber J. Grant was ordained and set apart as the Church President on November 23, 1918.  During the holiday season and on other occasions, President Grant habitually gave of his substance to buy books for numerous friends. He drew from a multiplicity of titles, sometimes buying out entire editions, four or five thousand copies, of a book he particularly liked.  Handwritten messages in his own deft penmanship or preprinted inscriptions were all signed in person. Such works as William Jennings Bryan’s The Prince of Peace, Edgar A. Guest’s The Path to Home, Thomas Carlyle’s Martin Luther, David Starr Jordan’s The Strength of Being Clean, Henry Drummond’s The Greatest Thing in the World, and Orson FE Whitney’s Love and the Light were among those circulated. He had read each volume with care himself and underscored salient passages in his own copy. Illustrative of his exhaustive giving of books in the holiday season are his activities on Christmas Day, 1925: “Spent the morning until 11:00 AM at the hotel writing in books and signing slips…A lot of books arrived from Independence last night. Some of them should have been here at least ten days ago and I wrote in books until late last night and again this morning, also wrote in them this afternoon until about 300…  Called and delivered a lot of books this evening. Gusta, [President Grant’s wife, Hulda Augusta Winters] was with me… presented to all the people on whom we called this afternoon and evening a copy of “The Prince of Peace.”…Have had a very strenuous day indeed but have thoroughly enjoyed the day in visiting with my daughters and granddaughters and friends.” President Grant enjoyed both an exceptional number of friends in the religious sphere and also in the greater business community. His diary chronicles the massive efforts of one man to make a difference in people’s lives: “Day spent with books. Books! Books!  Had lunch at home today for the first time in several days.  I am sending books to all the members of the Sunday School Union Board, Y.L. and Y.M.M.I.A.,  Primary,  Relief Society boards, and to the directors of Grant & Co., Home Fire, Utah State National Bank, Zions Savings Bank, Utah Light & Power Co., Utah Light & Traction Co.,  Z.C.M.I., Utah Hotel, Salt Lake Theater, Consolidated Wagon & Machine Co., Beneficial Life Ins co., Union Pacific Railroad Co., and the Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank to say nothing about personal friends. I am sorry to say that all...

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8th Day Christmas Past Re-cast Winner & Answer

Posted by on Dec 8, 2020 in Christmas Past Re-Cast 2020 |

Answer 8th Day Christmas Past Re-cast: 100,000 front-line men fighting during World War I participated in a Christmas Truce. Congrats to 8th Day drawing winner, Vicki Eccles, who won an Olive wood Nativity scene, set of Olive wood tree ornaments, and embroidered coin purse (Palestinian cultural design made by a Bedouin seamstress)- $70 value! Please contact MHA office 801-272-5601 or info@mormonheritage.com within 30 days to arrange for how to receive your prize.  Story still available on yesterday’s...

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8th Day Christmas Past Question & Story

Posted by on Dec 8, 2020 in Christmas Past Re-Cast 2020 | 20 comments

On the 8th Day of Christmas Past Re-cast…  Question: Today’s “Light the World” is to show appreciation to health care workers fighting in the trenches of Covid.   What amazing thing happened to a different front-line, during Christmas in the trenches of World War I? To be entered into today’s daily giveaway & FREE tour drawing- Read the story below; “Comment” & “Share” your answer on Facebook or our blog.  Click Here for contest rules. President Spencer W. Kimball, before he ever became an apostle, related a Christmas story to Primary children about World War I. He said: “One Christmas during the World War, when no-man’s land between the trenches was white with snow, the troops in a certain ‘quiet sector’ began to exchange holiday greetings by means of crudely painted signs. A few minutes later, men who spoke German and men who spoke English were climbing from their trenches without guns and meeting on neutral ground to shake hands and exchange souvenirs, unmindful of war . . . Friends they were, not enemies, this Christmas day.” It was Christmas Eve and Christmas Day 1914 – over 100 years ago, thousands of soldiers put down their rifles, stepped out of their trenches and spent Christmas mingling with their German enemies along the Western front. In the hundred years since, the event has been seen as a kind of miracle, a rare moment of peace just a few months into a war that would eventually claim over 15 million lives.  Some two-thirds of troops — about 100,000 people — are believed to have participated in the legendary truce. “First the Germans would sing one of their carols and then we would sing one of ours, until when we started up ‘O Come, All Ye Faithful’ the Germans immediately joined in singing the same hymn to the Latin words Adeste Fideles. And I thought, well, this is really a most extraordinary thing ­– two nations both singing the same carol in the middle of a war.” Christmas morning, in some places, German soldiers emerged from their trenches, calling out “Merry Christmas” in English. Allied soldiers came out warily to greet them. In others, Germans held up signs reading “You no shoot, we no shoot.” Over the course of the day, troops exchanged gifts of cigarettes, food, buttons and hats. The Christmas truce also allowed both sides to finally bury their dead comrades, whose bodies had lain for weeks on “no man’s land,” the ground between opposing trenches. The truce was widespread but not universal. Evidence suggests that in many places firing continued — and in at least two a truce was attempted but soldiers attempting to fraternize were shot by opposing forces. Still, a century later, the truce has been remembered as a testament to the power of hope and humanity in a truly dark hour of history.  Christmas, indeed, is the one time of the year when peace...

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7th Day Christmas Past Re-cast Winner and Answer

Posted by on Dec 8, 2020 in Christmas Past Re-Cast 2020 |

Answer 7th Day Christmas Past Re-cast: Sister Hinckley left magical signs of Christmas to her family by her sweet actions of Christmas cards, grandkid sleepovers, and ornaments. Congrats to 7th Day drawing winner, Susan Booth, who won an Olive wood “Holy Family” carving, set of 4 Olive wood ornaments (laser carved), BYU Jerusalem t-shirt (note the camel in place of the cougar!), Olive wood oil vial holder/key chain (olive oil vial inside), Jerusalem tote bag with wallet, and BYU Jerusalem t-shirt (XL)- $85 value! Please contact MHA office 801-272-5601 or info@mormonheritage.com within 30 days to arrange for how to receive your prize.  Story still available on yesterday’s...

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7th Day Christmas Past Re-cast Question and Story

Posted by on Dec 7, 2020 in Christmas Past Re-Cast 2020 | 19 comments

On the 7th Day of Christmas Past Re-cast…  Question: Today’s “Light the World” is to lift others by leaving signs of Christmas.  What ‘signs of Christmas’ did Marjorie Pay Hinckley  make magical?  To be entered into today’s daily giveaway & FREE tour drawing- Read the story below; “Comment” & “Share” your answer on Facebook or our blog.  Click Here for contest rules. If her grandchildren had to pinpoint one time of year that reminds them of Grandma Hinckley, it would have to be Christmas. This is her holiday. Everything she does with it is magical. Around the beginning of December, little cards arrive every four or five days in the mail to her grandchildren. Each child remembers the excitement of getting a card with just his or her own name on it. If you lived out of town, it was added reassurance that Grandma always thought about you even if you didn’t see her very often. And these aren’t ordinary cards. They pop out or stand up or play a Christmas carol. One grandchild even remembers one that her brother received that unfolded into a Santa mask. The cards usually contain one or two sentences at most, things like: “Good things happen at Christmastime” or “From your secret elf” or “Start counting the days” or just a simple “XOXO.” She usually didn’t sign her name, but the small, cursive penmanship was very familiar.  Somewhere in between all of the cards was an invitation to the Grandchildren’s Christmas Party: “Attendance mandatory” or “Only the chicken pox will qualify as an excuse.” Christmas anticipation for her grandchildren didn’t get any better than receiving: Sunday, December 18, 5:30 p.m. Christmas dinner and fish pond. Walk through Temple Square. Try, try, try to be there! Love, Grandma H. Thursday, December 22, 7:00 p.m. Walk through Temple Square if we didn’t make it on the 18th. Sleepover. Breakfast. “Annie” at Promised Valley Playhouse. 4:00 p.m. Straight home! Love, G. Hinckley Marjorie Hinckley’s granchildren write the following accounts – Michael Hinckley, a grandson, remembers these extraordinary parties: My earliest and clearest memories of Grandma are the “Cousins’ Christmas Parties,” which were an essential part of each Christmas season. The magic of the Christmas season is already prevalent in the lives of children, yet this annual gala put on by Grandma added even more excitement. First of all, the simple fact that Grandma would invite only the grandchildren to come to the party was something significant in itself. While at family dinners we kids were always at the “children’s tables,” such was not the case on this occasion. There were no adults—only Grandma. We children all sat together at the “adults’ table.” We were the important people. The tables were festively decorated with linens of green and red, plates portraying Christmas scenes and symbols, and other articles ornamenting each dining place. Perhaps the most exciting feature of the dinner table was the...

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