There are many ways in which the Christian holiday of Christmas is celebrated in the American city of Portland, Oregon. Annual traditions include the Christmas Ships Parade, Peacock Lane, the Pioneer Courthouse Square Christmas tree, and the art installation Santa Clones . The city hosts many other displays, concerts, and other performances related to Christmas annually.
In 2023, Portland ranked number 21 in WalletHub's list of the top 100 cities in the U.S. for celebrating Christmas. The city tied in first place in the Christmas tree category, ranked fifth for having the most gift shops, and was among cities with the most Christmas tree farms per capita. [1]
The day when a "red nose" is placed on the White Stag sign as an imitation of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer has become known as "Nose Day" and "is how most Portlanders know that the Christmas season has arrived", according to The Oregonian . [1] Historically, the Meier & Frank Holiday Parade (originally the Fairy Tale Parade and later Macy's Holiday Parade) signified the arrival of Santa Claus, prompting some Portlanders to refer to the event as "the Christmas parade". [2] Among annual events are the Christmas Ships Parade (established in 1954) and the lighting of the Pioneer Courthouse Square Christmas tree.
The Portland Expo Center has hosted "America's Largest Christmas Bazaar" since 1982. [3] Annual Christmas displays are hosted at the Benson Hotel [4] and many other hotels, [5] as well as Pittock Mansion. [6] The lobby bar of Hotel Vintage, called Bacchus Bar, has hosted the Christmas-themed pop-up bar Miracle. [7] Some churches in Portland have offered Blue Christmas services. [8] The Winter Market has hosted a Christmas in July event at the Goat Blocks. [9]
Santaland was a feature of the Meier & Frank (later Macy's) store in downtown Portland's Meier & Frank Building for over forty years, [10] starting in the 1950s. It took place on the sixth floor and later the tenth floor, and featured a monorail. [11] [12] [13] Following the store's closure, some items from Santaland were donated to the Oregon Historical Society (OHS) [14] [15] and the Portland Business Alliance. OHS has continued to display the nostalgia, which includes animatronic elves, a mechanical Rudolph, a model of Santaland's original monorail, a Cinnamon Bear costume, and a chair used for Santa Claus greetings. [16] [17]
According to The Oregonian, "The Cinnamon Bear story, as told in [a] 1937 radio production, was broadcast on radio stations across the country, but it became a particular local tradition when Portland-based Lipman's department store adopted Cinnamon Bear as its Christmas mascot. Along with Santa Claus, children could meet the bear at Lipman's flagship store (which is today home to the Royal Sonesta hotel). The tradition continued after Lipman's was sold and became Frederick & Nelson in 1979... But Frederick & Nelson closed its downtown store in 1986, and the company’s last Oregon location, at Washington Square mall, closed in 1991. Though versions of Cinnamon Bear made a few community appearances in the early 1990s, he began to fade from Portlanders' collective Christmas memories." [18]
Portland hosts many Christmas-related concerts and other performances, [19] [20] including the annual Tuba Christmas. [21] [22] The Oregon Symphony hosts Gospel Christmas at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall each year. [6] Portland's Singing Christmas Tree has been held for approximately sixty years. [23] [24] The city has seen "alternatives" and other versions of Tchaikovsky's Christmas-centric ballet The Nutcracker (1892) presented by various arts organizations. [25] Oregon Ballet Theatre performs George Balanchine's The Nutcracker (1954) annually. [26] [27]
In addition to the Christmas Ships Parade and the Pioneer Courthouse Square Christmas tree, light displays are found at Peacock Lane in southeast Portland's Sunnyside neighborhood, at the Oregon Zoo in Washington Park for the ZooLights event, and at The Grotto in northeast Portland's Madison South neighborhood for the Festival of Lights. According to Portland Monthly , The Grotto's Christmas festival bills itself as "one of the world's largest Christmas choral festivals" and has indoor concerts with choirs representing many churches and schools. [28] Established in 1993, [29] the annual Winter Wonderland event at the Portland International Raceway has been described as the "largest holiday light show west of the Mississippi" [30] and the largest holiday light show in the Pacific Northwest. [31] The 2024 event had 250 displays, some of which were animated. [32]
In addition to Santa greetings at Santaland, Portland has seen Black Santa [33] and Hipster Santa greetings. [34] [35] Mayor Bud Clark dressed as Santa in 1991. [10]
The city has hosted an annual SantaCon pub crawl, [36] [37] sometimes called Stumptown Santacon. [38] [39] Since the early 2010s, Chris Willis has installed a display of Santa statues called Santa Clones throughout the city. [40]
Since 2010, the Krampus parade called Krampus Lauf has been held on Hawthorne Boulevard in southeast Portland. Portland has also had Krampus greetings [41] (as an alternative to Santa greetings) and Fear PDX has hosted a Krampus-themed haunted house in December. [42]
A Christmas tree is installed in downtown Portland's Pioneer Courthouse Square annually. [43] A Christmas tree lot has operated in southeast Portland's Woodstock neighborhood since 2004. [44] One local organization gives away Christmas trees to families in need each year. CJ McCollum partnered with the group when he played for the Portland Trail Blazers. [45] [46]
The radio stations KFIS and KKCW, which serve the Portland metropolitan area, play Christmas music. [47] [48] [49] In 2024, KFIS started playing Christmas music on Election Day "as a way to provide a space of upliftment and positivity to combat the stress the Election Day brings", according to KGW. [50] KGW has broadcast an hour-long special of the lighting ceremony for the Pioneer Courthouse Square Christmas tree, featuring a sing-along led by Pink Martini. [51] [52]
Many notable restaurants and other businesses have operated on Christmas, including East India Co. Grill and Bar, Excellent Cuisine, Doug Fir Lounge, Jake's Famous Crawfish, Jake's Grill, Laurelhurst Theater, [53] Master Kong, [54] The Original Dinerant, Portland City Grill, [55] Radio Room, Shandong, Swiss Hibiscus, [56] and Urban Farmer. [57]
Samuel Francis Adams is an American politician in Portland, Oregon. Adams was mayor of Portland from 2009 to 2012 and previously served on the Portland City Council and as chief of staff to former Mayor Vera Katz. Adams was the first openly gay mayor of a large U.S. city.
The Meier & Frank Building is a fifteen-story, glazed terra cotta building located in downtown Portland, Oregon, across from the northeast corner of Pioneer Courthouse Square. The building is the former flagship store and headquarters building for the Meier & Frank department store chain, which was taken over by Macy's in 2006. In 2006–2007, the building's lower five floors were remodeled as a Macy's, while the upper eleven floors were renovated in 2008 into a luxury hotel known as The Nines. Macy's closed in April 2017 and the lower levels were rebuilt as office space.
Pioneer Courthouse Square, also known as Portland's living room, is a public space occupying a full 40,000-square-foot (3,700 m2) city block in the center of downtown Portland, Oregon, United States. Opened in 1984, the square is bounded by Southwest Morrison Street on the north, Southwest 6th Avenue on the east, Southwest Yamhill Street on the south, and Southwest Broadway on the west.
On Tuesday, May 17, 2016, an election was held in Portland, Oregon, to elect the mayor. Ted Wheeler was elected after garnering 54% of the primary vote. Incumbent mayor Charlie Hales did not seek a second term.
On November 10, 2016, three days of protests in Portland, Oregon, turned into a riot, when a group of anarchists broke off from a larger group of peaceful protesters who were opposed to the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States.
The Women's March on Portland, also known as the Portland Women's March, the Women's March on Washington, Portland, and Women's March Portland, was an event in Portland, Oregon. Scheduled to coincide with the 2017 Women's March, it was held on January 21, 2017, the day after the inauguration of Donald Trump. The march was one of the largest public protests in Oregon's history with crowd estimates as high as 100,000 participants. No arrests were made during the demonstration.
Mother's Bistro and Bar is a restaurant in Portland, Oregon.
Audrey McCall Beach is an urban beach along the east bank of the Willamette River, near the Hawthorne Bridge in Portland, Oregon, United States.
The Big Float was an annual July celebration of the Willamette River in Portland, Oregon, United States. Established in 2011, as a benefit for the Human Access Project, attendees formed a giant people-powered flotilla and beach party to encourage Portlanders to reclaim the Willamette River for swimming and other aquatic recreation.
Carts on Foster was a collection of food carts, or "pod", in Portland, Oregon's Foster-Powell neighborhood, in the United States. Established in 2010, Carts on Foster was owned and managed by Steve Woolard. Ownership was transferred to 2021, and the pod closed in 2023.
Cart Blocks is a food cart pod in Portland, Oregon's Ankeny Square, in the United States. It is operated by Friends of the Green Loop.
Mike Bennett is an American visual artist based in Portland, Oregon. He studied art education and has worked as a preschool teacher.
Shroom House is a pair of shops which have sold psychedelic mushrooms illegally in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, as well as Portland, Oregon, United States.
In Portland, Oregon, Christmas trees have been installed at Pioneer Courthouse Square annually since the public space opened in 1984. The trees have been donated by Stimson Lumber Company since 2002, and are delivered the week of Veterans Day. With some exceptions, the trees are 75-foot-tall Douglas firs, decorated with thousands of multi-colored LED lights.
The Portland Stand Up Paddleboard Witches on the Willamette, more commonly known as "Witches on the Willamette", or simply the witch paddle, is an annual witch-themed standup paddleboarding event in Portland, Oregon. Ginny Kauffman organized the first event in 2017.
Phở Gabo is a small chain of Vietnamese restaurants in the Portland metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of Oregon. The business is owned by Eddie Dong and has operated in Hillsboro since 2015 and Happy Valley since 2022. Previously, a third location operated in northeast Portland's Roseway neighborhood from 2018 to 2024. It closed due to a series of odor complaints by an anonymous neighbor, resulting in multiple visits from inspectors, fines, and later a change to the city's odor code.
The Portland Winter Ice Rink is an ice rink, temporarily installed during winter months in Portland, Oregon, United States. Prosper Portland launched the project for the 2023–2024 season, and popular demand prompted the economic development organization to organize the rink again for the 2024–2025 season.
Weird Portland United is a nonprofit organization based in Portland, Oregon, United States. Brian Kidd, who is known as the Unipiper, founded the collective in 2018 in an effort to "Keep Portland Weird".
Santa Clones is an annual Christmas display by Chris Willis in Portland, Oregon, United States. The display featured hundreds of Santa Claus statues and the location is different each year. Willis started the project in the early 2010s and the size of his collection of statues has grown over time.
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