How Charlie Brown killed the aluminum Christmas tree

David Murray
Great Falls Tribune
The "Charlie Brown Christmas Tree" has become an icon of American pop culture. But its creation contributed to the demise of the aluminum Christmas tree.

It's hard to imagine a children’s television show more directly responsible for the death of a consumer product line than “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”

“A Charlie Brown Christmas” is perhaps the most beloved animated children’s special ever produced. It’s the story of an awkward and humble boy’s attempts to find the true meaning of Christmas.

“A Charlie Brown Christmas” resonated with 1965 television audiences in a way no other children’s programming had before.

An excerpt from a 1959 brochure from the Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA) titled "How to decorate your aluminum Christmas tree"

It catapulted the career of cartoonist Charles Schulz, launched a merchandising empire that would eventually realize $1 billion in sales annually and poured the foundation for iconic storylines such as Charlie Brown’s failed attempts to kick a football, the kite-eating tree and his unrequited love for “the little red-headed girl.”

It also nearly single-handedly broke the aluminum Christmas tree industry.

But let’s back up a little.

Every good story has a beginning, and this one begins a few decades earlier. Artificial Christmas trees have been in existence in one form or another for nearly 150 years.

In the late 1880s, German manufacturers began selling Christmas trees made from dyed goose feathers attached to wire branches.

In the 1930s, a British company, Addis Housewares, enjoyed temporary success exporting Christmas trees made using tinted pig hair. These trees were constructed using the same machinery Addis Housewares used to make its toilet brushes.

Early attempts at metallic trees began in the late 1930s. A 1937 article in Popular Science encouraged readers to use an insect spray gun to coat live trees with aluminum paint to obtain a look that resembled “molten metal.”

The end result of applying an oil-based spray paint onto drying pine boughs had to have been equivalent to building a time bomb in your living room, complete with the radiant gas heat and indoor smoking that was common at the time.

In 1955, the Modern Coatings Company, of Chicago, obtained a patent for an aluminum Christmas tree. The trees were a space-age standout, but they were bulky, difficult to assemble and — most of all — expensive.

An excerpt from a 1959 brochure from the Aluminum Company of America (ALCOA) titled "How to decorate your aluminum Christmas tree."

Modern Coating’s 6-foot, handmade trees retailed for $80, equivalent to paying $730 for a Christmas tree today.

In December 1958, the toy sales manager of the Aluminum Specialty Company, Tom Gannon, spotted one of the Modern Coatings trees at a Ben Franklin store in Chicago. Gannon, bought the tree and brought it back to Aluminum Specialty’s headquarters in Manitowoc, Wisconsin.

At the time, Aluminum Specialty was best known for making pots and pans, but the company also had a toy division that, among other things, produced aluminum Christmas tree ornaments.

Aluminum Specialty engineers deconstructed the Modern Coatings tree and re-designed it to include foil “needles.” The tree could be mass produced for less than $12.

The Aluminum Specialty tree was unveiled at the American Toy Fair in March 1959. It was an immediate success. Orders poured in.

That Christmas, Aluminum Specialty sold all 10,000 trees it had rushed to produce, each selling for around $25. The next year, the company dedicated several of its production lines to the manufacture of aluminum trees under the brand name Evergleam.

While many other manufacturers followed suit, Evergleam always dominated the market. At its peak in 1964, Aluminum Specialty was producing around 150,000 Christmas trees a year, with them coming in a variety of colors and sizes.

They were sleek, elegant and didn’t lose their needles. They also included the very real possibility of death by electrocution.

In the 1970s, the Consumer Product Safety Commission issued the following warning: “Never use electric lights on a metallic tree. The tree can become charged with electricity from faulty lights, and a person touching a branch could be electrocuted.”

Most aluminum trees included a color wheel, a rotating plastic disc that projected colored lights onto the tree’s reflective surface. It was disco cool more than a decade before "Saturday Night Fever."

The future looked bright for the aluminum tree industry. Aluminum Specialty was running three shifts a day, 10 months out of the year just to keep up with the orders.

Then the Peanuts Gang came to town.

It’s important to consider the historical context within which “A Charlie Brown Christmas” arrived.

President Kennedy had been assassinated in Dallas just two years earlier. Peaceful civil rights protesters had been brutally clubbed by state troopers on a bridge in Selma, Alabama, and tens of thousands of young American men were being shipped off to fight and die in a strange corner of Southeast Asia called Vietnam.

The "Charlie Brown Christmas  Tree" has become an icon of American pop culture. But its creation contributed to the demise of the aluminum Christmas tree

The nation was hungry for reassurance — a return to a nostalgic past that was simple, sincere, honest and understandable.

“A Charlie Brown Christmas” helped to fill that void, and the foil that was used to represent all that was wrong with Christmas was the aluminum Christmas tree.

“A Charlie Brown Christmas” was written and animated on a shoestring budget of just $96,000. Produced over a six-month period, the special was completed just 10 days shy of its national debut on Dec. 9, 1965.

CBS producers predicted a disaster because of the show’s unorthodox jazz-influenced music, tone, pacing and because of the production’s overt references to Christian religious beliefs.

Instead, “A Charlie Brown Christmas” became a national sensation.

More than 15 million viewers watched the broadcast, bested just slightly by those who tuned in to watch “Bonanza." It won the 1966 Emmy for Most Outstanding Children’s Programming and a Peabody Award for the most “powerful, enlightening, and invigorating story in television and radio.”

The musical score for “A Charlie Brown Christmas” sold more than 4 million copies, and the 25-minute video has been rebroadcast by CBS and then ABC every year for more than a half century.

Right or wrong, much of its emotional power came at the expense of the aluminum tree industry.

Midway through the story, as Charlie Brown confesses his angst over ever finding the true meaning of Christmas, Lucy provides this analysis:

“Let’s face it. We all know that Christmas is a big commercial racket. It's run by a big eastern syndicate you know.”

It was meant as a joke, but somewhere within that statement resided a kernel of truth. The confession of an animated cartoon character caused millions of Americans to turn inward and ask themselves what had become of their traditional values of Christmas.

Later in the broadcast, as Charlie Brown and Linus seek out the perfect tree for their Christmas play, they come across a cold display of aluminum trees. Walking into the lot, Linus raps upon the shell of an aluminum tree, which echoes back with all the emotional appeal of the hull of a B-52 bomber.

“This one really brings Christmas close to a person,” Linus tells Charlie Brown with more than a hint of sarcasm.

The emotional catalyst of “A Charlie Brown Christmas” drills down to one small and lonely sapling; a needle-dropping outcast, kind of like a lost puppy.

“This little green one here seems to need a home,” Charlie Brown tells Linus.

In selecting this forlorn sapling, Charlie Brown expressed the emotion of a nation. He is at first ridiculed for his decision, but, in the end, the children of the Peanuts Gang rally around Charlie Brown and his sad, little tree.

“Charlie Brown is a blockhead,” Lucy confesses, “but he did get a nice Christmas tree.”

Charlie Brown’s Christmas tree represented something missing from American culture: authenticity and vulnerability, a lonely wayfarer in need of encouragement and support. If we could only all pull together, then the true meaning of Christmas would appear before our eyes.

 It was always there, standing right before us.

Rene Murray's aluminum Christmas Tree.

While public and critical acclaim for "A Charlie Brown Christmas" was near universal, it came at the expense of aluminum Christmas tree manufacturers.

Suddenly, their foil needles didn’t seem to sparkle so brightly. None of this was helped by the fact that around the same time, new plastic trees with lifelike, polyethylene needles began entering the market.

Rene Murray with her new vintage aluminum Christmas tree, which was an early Christmas gift from her daughter. It's been Rene's Christmas dream to have an aluminum tree since she first saw one at age 10.

The aluminum tree market collapsed. Sales plummeted, and, in 1970, the Aluminum Specialty Company discontinued its production of aluminum Christmas trees.

Close to a million were produced, but, in the end, most of them ended up in trash cans and flea markets. In the 1980s, it was not uncommon to find aluminum trees that once sold for $30 or more to be in a discount bin for 25 cents.

But then an emotional shift took place. Children of the 1960s, now grown and with families of their own, began to seek out the old aluminum trees. Just as sentimentality had undercut the aluminum tree industry in 1966, it resurrected it in 1996.

Suddenly, vintage aluminum Christmas trees gained a resurgent value on the secondary market. Old Evergleams, rescued from attics and garage shelves, began selling for hundreds of dollars.

In 2005, a rare, 7-foot, pink, aluminum Christmas tree — the exact tree Lucy implored Charlie Brown to get for their nativity play — sold on e-Bay for $3,600.

New manufacturers have sprung up, selling reproduction aluminum trees online in a variety of sizes and colors that the now-defunct Aluminum Specialty Company could have only dreamed of.

This past November, my daughter found a vintage Evergleam aluminum tree online at a bargain, but not inexpensive, price. We collaborated to buy it for my wife, who had wanted one “ever since she was a little girl.”

It now stands proudly in our living room, a multi-colored wheel of lights shining across its metallic boughs and reflecting out onto the street.

Christmas, in some measure, is about returning to our past. Families gather to share in the warmth of their collective memories. What was old once again becomes new.

There is no replacement for a live Christmas tree. Of the five trees we have displayed in our home, a special place is reserved for a living example of the yuletide spirit. And come Christmas morning, the space beneath that living tree's branches will shelter our gifts to one another.

Yet I admit a special fondness for the aluminum tree. It reminds me of my own childhood innocence when anything seemed possible, including a Christmas tree made entirely of metal.

Merry Christmas Charlie Brown — and I forgive you.