Stopping by a shopping mall to visit and take a photo with Santa Claus is a yearly tradition. While he started out seated in a throne-like chair with a simple backdrop, nowadays, Kris Kringle is typically stationed in an elaborately decorated winter wonderland, complete with elves and Mrs. Claus. The tradition started as far back as the 1800s in cathedrals of commerce—better known as department stores.
Origins of the Department Store Santa
The American tradition of Christmas shopping began to take root in the 1820s and 1830s with people purchasing confections, keepsakes and gifts for children, and stores advertising their wares as presents. Meanwhile, in 1822, an Episcopal minister named Clement Clarke Moore wrote a narrative Christmas poem for his daughters entitled “An Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas”—better known today as “‘Twas The Night Before Christmas.” The popular poem’s description of the “jolly old elf” with his “broad face and a little round belly” helped create the familiar image of Santa Claus we’ve known for the last 200 years.
Unlike some of the more intimidating folk versions of St. Nicholas and Kris Kringle first introduced in the United States, this iteration of Santa Claus was kind and friendly-looking—someone children wouldn’t be afraid to approach. So, when store owners decided to incorporate Santa into their establishment’s festivities, they opted for the jovial version, Leigh Eric Schmidt explains in his book Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays.