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Jul 29 2008

Holidays Are All About Tradition In Philadelphia

Philly’s Annual Happenings Make The Season Special

People come to Philadelphia year after year to create new holiday memories with the help of the region’s time-tested traditions. Parents who remember standing in awe of the Enchanted Colonial Village at Lit Brother’s department store can take another peek inside the busy bakery, the bustling village store and the seven other restored scenes with their own children at the brand-new Please Touch Museum®. The Holiday Light Show at Macy’s and A Longwood Garden’s Christmas continue to make the season bright. And each year the fanciful Mummers strut their stuff up Broad Street during the day-long New Year’s Day parade. These and other classic Philly customs make the region a must-see during the holidays.

All About Christmas:

  • Peddler’s Village always dresses up and throws a party during holidays throughout the year, and the winter season is no exception. Gingerbread home builders compete for cash prizes for the Gingerbread House Competition and Display (November 21, 2008-January 8, 2009); Santa switches on the Christmas lights during the much-anticipated Grand Illumination Celebration (November 21); and the man in red makes a grand appearance on a horse-drawn carriage for the annual Christmas Festival (December 6-7). Route 263 & Street Road, Lahaska, (215) 794-4000, www.peddlersvillage.com
  • From November 25, 2008 through January 4, 2009, visitors to historic Pennypacker Mills are treated to guided tours of the richly decorated mansion. A free Victorian Christmas Open House on December 13 features living historians, live music and sing-alongs around a Christmas tree. Demonstrations of toy candy making, visits with Santa and holiday music from the Estey Pump Organ round out the special day. 5 Haldeman Road, Schwenksville, (610) 287-9349, www.montcopa.org/historicsites
  • The holidays go red, white and green at Longwood Gardens during A Longwood Gardens Christmas, November 27, 2008-January 11, 2009. Hundreds of thousands of lights, strolling carolers, daily concerts, ice skating performances and other festivities brighten the gardens’ vast grounds and conservatory. 1001 Longwood Road, Kennett Square, (610) 388-1000, www.longwoodgardens.org
  • The new Christmas Village outside of City Hall invites shoppers to browse the holiday goods displayed in 50 decorated booths. Entertainment and hot cocoa warm people’s spirits as they wander through the outdoor market. The shopping wonderland runs from November 27 to December 24, 2008. Broad & Market Streets, (215) 627-2332, philachristmas.com
  • Although the beloved Wanamaker Building is now home to Macy’s, the annual Holiday Light Show remains a Philadelphia tradition. Since 1956, the department store building has welcomed winter with the Grand Court’s historic organ and a dazzling light spectacle. Brighter than ever since a 2007 update with LED lighting, the show will expand to include a new Magic Christmas Tree with LED lights for 2008. Nostalgia buffs may notice the absence of the dancing water fountains, which were retired due to safety concerns. Julie Andrews narrates the show, which runs daily, on the hour, from November 28 through December 31, 2008. 1300 Market Street, (215) 241-9000
  • There are more magical moments to be had in Macy’s historic building just an escalator ride away. On display on the third floor from November 28 through December 31, 2008, the delightful Dickens Village is a family favorite. They’re all there—Tiny Tim, Ebenezer Scrooge and the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future—and scaled down so the whole family can walk through a real-life Christmas Carol. 1300 Market Street, (215) 241-9000
  • Celebrating its first holiday season in its new Memorial Hall location, Please Touch Museum® presents Enchanted Colonial Village, November 28, 2008-January 1, 2009. This year marks the first time Please Touch can showcase all nine of the remaining scenes, along with their moving figures and mechanical displays, formerly displayed in Lit Brothers department store from 1962 through 1975. 4231 Avenue of the Republic, (215) 581-3181, www.pleasetouchmuseum.org
  • From November 28, 2008 through January 4, 2009, it’s a miniature winter wonderland amid the evergreens at the Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania’s Holiday Garden Railway display, a quarter mile of model-train track featuring seven loops and tunnels with 15 different rail lines, two cable cars, nine bridges and bustling trains that cruise past scaled replicas of historic monuments. Philadelphia-area landmarks, such as a replica of Independence Hall, are made using pine cone seeds for shingles, acorns as finials and twigs as downspouts. 100 Northwestern Avenue, (215) 247-5777, www. morrisarboretum.org
  • One of William Penn’s original squares, Franklin Square is a winter hotspot on weekends from November 28 through December. With appearances by Santa and Elfreth the Elf, storytime with Mrs. Claus, rides on the carousel, mini-golf and spins on the Lightening Bolt Express pint-size train, weekends at the square turn into a holiday party aglow with thousands of twinkling lights. 6th & Race Streets, (215) 629-4026, www.historicphiladelphia.org
  • A Brandywine Christmas takes center stage from November 28, 2008 through January 11, 2009, at the Brandywine River Museum, home to a large collection of Wyeth family paintings. You’ll see a display of trees featuring “critters” and all things natural, a Victorian dollhouse and a model railroad with more than 2,000 feet of track. U.S. Route 1, Chadds Ford, (610) 388-2700, www.brandywinemuseum.org
  • On select weekend days from November 29 through December 30, 2008, the elegant Swann Lounge at the Four Seasons Hotel Philadelphia presents Tea in Wonderland. Young attendees can visit with Alice herself and watch excerpts from The Nutcracker ballet performed by students from the Rock School for Dance Education. 1 Logan Square, (215) 963-1500, www.fourseasons.com/philadelphia
  • Step back in time to experience the splendor of Christmas during the holiday tours of the Historic Fairmount Park Houses. Cedar Grove, Lemon Hill, Strawberry Mansion, Mount Pleasant, Laurel Hill and Woodford will be decorated for the season, December 3-14, 2008. (215) 684-7863, www.fairmountparkhouses.org
  • This year’s holiday calendar at The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts and the Academy of Music is chock full of old-fashioned favorites, including Holiday POPS! with Peter Nero and the Philly Pops, the Soweto Gospel Choir, George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker and The Philadelphia Orchestra’s version of Handel’s Messiah and annual New Year’s Eve Concert. Various dates from December 5-31, 2008. Kimmel, Broad & Spruce Streets; Academy, Broad & Locust Streets, (215) 893-1999, www.kimmelcenter.org
  • Relive December 1776 and witness Washington Crossing the Delaware River, a free, annual reenactment staged at 1:00 p.m. on Christmas Day at Washington Crossing Historic Park. A reenactment rehearsal, set for 1:00 p.m. on December 7, 2008, is accompanied by family-friendly activities throughout the day. Routes 32 & 532, Washington Crossing, (215) 493-4076
  • The world’s largest LED screen, The Comcast Experience at the 57-story Comcast Center continues to impress with a Philadelphia holiday tradition for the 21st century. The Comcast Holiday Spectacular amazes onlookers of all ages by projecting original holiday imagery set to music. The 15-minute show, which runs from Thanksgiving to New Year’s Day, occurs at the top of the hour, 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. www.gophila.com/comcast

Other Seasonal Celebrations:

  • The Chester County Historical Society will celebrate the holiday season with an open house on December 5-6, 2008. Exhibitions Discovering Dollhouses and West Chester Railroad 150th Anniversary continue through January 10, 2009. And the 5th Annual Menorah Lighting and Hanukkah Celebration by the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia’s Kehillah of Chester County takes place December 23 at 7:00 p.m. 225 N. High Street, West Chester, (610) 692-4800, www.cchs-pa.org
  • On December 20, 2008, visitors to The African American Museum in Philadelphia can explore African-American history and the meaning of Kwanzaa during the Sharing the Heritage Annual Holiday and Pre-Kwanzaa Celebration, featuring tours, performances, discussions of the holiday and a screening of the film The Black Candle: The Story of Kwanzaa. Just after Christmas, December 26-28, 2008, the museum presents Celebrate Kwanzaa, a children’s event full of storytelling, face painting and lessons about the holiday. 701 Arch Street, (215) 574-0380, www.aampmuseum.org
  • On December 25, 2008, the holiday spirit goes beyond Christmas at the National Museum of American Jewish History, which presents its annual Being Jewish at Christmas program, a family event that includes music, refreshments and children’s activities. 55 N. 5th Street, (215) 923-3811, www.nmajh.org

Ring in the New Year:

  • Please Touch Museum® museum will celebrate 2009 early with Countdown to Noon on December 31, 2008. The museum opens at 9:00 a.m. and holds “Noon Year” activities throughout the day, including a visit by some of Philadelphia’s famous Mummers leading up to the big countdown. Memorial Hall, 4231 Avenue of the Republic, (215) 581-3181, www.pleasetouchmuseum.org
  • Winter sports enthusiasts and observers can celebrate at the Blue Cross RiverRink’s New Year’s Eve Party on Ice, a family-friendly affair that lets revelers breathe in the fresh, chilly air of the New Year and gives them the best view of the city’s spectacular midnight fireworks display over the Delaware River. Columbus Boulevard & Market Street, (215) 925-RINK, www.riverrink.com
  • For a Philadelphia experience that’s as traditional as cheesesteaks, a pilgrimage to the world-famous Mummer’s Parade on New Year’s Day is a must. Mummers are a tradition that began with ancient Roman laborers who spent one gift-giving day a year marching festively through the streets wearing masks. The Philadelphia manifestation, dating back to 1901, is a lively and colorful parade of costumed men who practice all year to strut, dance and play music up Broad Street. The parade begins at 9:00 a.m. at the intersection of Broad Street and Snyder Avenue and proceeds to City Hall, followed by a ticketed competition at the Pennsylvania Convention Center. Spectators should purchase tickets ahead of time to sit in the judging stand or get there early to find a spot along the parade route. A video of the parade is available in the Photos & Multimedia section of www.gophila.com/pressroom. Convention Center, 12th & Arch Streets, www.mummers.com; tickets for bleacher seating outside City Hall available at the Independence Visitor Center, 6th & Market Streets, (215) 965-7676, independencevisitorcenter.com; tickets for the competition at the Convention Center available at (215) 893-1999, ticketphiladelphia.org

The Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation (GPTMC) makes Philadelphia and The Countryside® a premier destination through marketing and image building that increases business and promotes the region’s vitality. For more information about travel to Philadelphia, visit www.gophila.com or call the Independence Visitor Center, located in Independence National Historical Park, at (800) 537-7676.

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Attached Media

Longwood Gardens

Longwood Gardens

During the annual A Longwood Gardens Christmas, the horticultural wonderland in scenic Brandywine Valley features a dazzling display of Christmas trees and poinsettias during the holiday season....

Credit: Photo courtesy of Longwood Gardens

Tags: Events, Holidays, Museums & Attractions, Parks & Gardens, Winter

Brandywine River Museum

Brandywine River Museum

Situated in a historic grist mill, the Brandywine River Museum in scenic Chadds Ford is best known for its collection of works by three generations of the Wyeth family....

Credit: Photo courtesy of the Brandywine River Museum

Tags: Arts & Culture, Museums & Attractions, Winter

The Comcast Holiday Spectacular

The Comcast Holiday Spectacular

The world’s largest LED screen, The Comcast Experience at the 57-story Comcast Center continues to impress with a Philadelphia holiday tradition for the 21st century. “The Comcast Holiday Spectacular” amazes onlookers of all ages by projecting original holiday imagery set to music. The 15-minute show, which runs from Thanksgiving to...

Credit: Photo by J. Holder for GPTMC

Tags: Architecture, Events, Holidays