Grandma Google, with help from AI, told this story far better than I could. Read on:
Puritans banned and discouraged Christmas celebrations, viewing them as unscriptural, pagan, and a source of social disorder. They believed the holiday was an excuse for excessive behavior like feasting, drinking, and revelry, which distracted from religious discipline and threatened the social order. In 1659, the Massachusetts Bay Colony outlawed the holiday, and those who observed it could be fined five shillings.
- Unscriptural and pagan origins: Puritans argued the Bible never commanded the celebration of Christ's birth and that the date of December 25th was chosen to co-opt pagan festivals.
- Social disorder and "excesses": They were strongly against the carousing, gambling, and public revelry that often accompanied Christmas, believing these activities allowed people to "do what they lust" and caused public scandal. Traditions like "wassailing," where the poor would demand food and drink from the wealthy, were particularly offensive as they disrupted social hierarchy.
- Pagan origins: The Puritans saw the holiday's roots in paganism and felt that its modern celebrations dishonored Jesus Christ.
- Legal ban: The Massachusetts Bay Colony passed a law in 1659 banning Christmas, fining anyone who observed it. Governor Bradford even declared December 25th a workday.
- Lingering effects: Even after the ban was repealed in 1681, the cultural aversion persisted in New England for decades, and the day was not made a federal holiday until 1870.

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