Home Home Bookmark Us Make Us Your Homepage
Christianstories.com > Christian Urban Legends
 

Advertise | Submit a Story | Link To Us | Search | Mailing List | Worship Songs | Online Store

""   ""
""
 
""

  Christian Stories & Poems

""

> Valentine Stories
> Urban Legends
> Christmas Stories
> Easter Stories
> Halloween Stories
> Thanksgiving Stories

> Challenging Stories
> Encouraging Stories
> Funny Stories
> Great Reminders Stories
> Heartwarming Stories
> Inspiring Stories

""

  Just for KIDS

 
Cool Slide show teaching the 10 Commandments
 

  Online Navigation

 
> About Us
> Advertise
> Link to Us
> Mailing List
> Shop Online
> Search a Story
> Submit a Story
> Worship Songs
 
  Looking For?  
 
> Christian Dating
> Christian Ringtones
> Credit Cards
> Free Stuff
> Free Gift Cards
> Good Deals
> Health, Skin, Diet
> Earn Extra $$
 
  Sites Recommended  
 
> Discountdressup.comChristian Worship Songs
> eCallBox.com
> iMusicMachine.com
> eChristianstories.com
> ChristianPoemsOnline.com
 

  FREE Email

 

Login to check account

Username

Password

Help

Password Reminder

Sign-up for free email

 

  Search for a story

 

Type in keywords i.e. Author, Title, or Phrase


 

  Bookmark Us

 
stumbleupon
blinklist
del.cio.us
digg
yahoo!
furl
rawsugar
shadows
netvouz

AddThis Social Bookmark Button  

 

  Number of Users Online

 

Users Online

 

Christian Urban Legends Stories For Your
Enjoyment @ Christianstories.com

Home > Christian Urban Legends

The Candy Cane was made by a Christian Indiana confectioner.

Claim:
The candy cane was made by a Christian Indiana confectioner.

The Truth:
How did Candy Canes get started? Anyone who's even been near a child knows the impossibility of keeping one of them still and quiet for any reasonable length of time. Like, say, for five minutes.

And it's even worse in church. Especially if it's a Loooonnnng Mass. This was the concern of the Choirmaster of Cologne back in 1670. His solution was probably the same as any harried child-care provider: Give 'em a candy.

Well, it just wouldn't do to pass 'em over a bag of Snickers. Even if they had been invented at the time, it would have felt a little sacrilegious. So, his solution was to create a religious candy. Kinda.

Hard candy was freely available - he simply changed the shape from a straight stick to a hooked one. It became a mini-shepherd's crook, instantly transforming a bad distraction into a heavenly one.

The Christmas tree was getting along in popularity around this time, and it didn't take long to see how easily these religiously shaped sweets hooked onto the branches. Soon, the candy cane left the pews and went commercial.

Although enormously popular, the original candy cane was simply white - it was a sugar stick with a humble attitude. It was not until the 1920's that the candy cane's more recognizable striping was added. This was done by Bob McCormick, who ran a small confectioners in Albany, GA. He started by hand-twisting the colors into the candy canes, and eventually found a way to mechanize the process. "Bob's Candies" is now most likely the brand of candy cane you buy during this holiday season.

There's an interesting, but wholly erroneous, net-myth concerning a confectioner in Indiana who put the whole candy cane idea together, fraught with deep significance in the red and white stripes for the blood of Christ and the color of purity. It can certainly mean that, if you care to think of the candy cane in that way, but the story has no basis in fact. Let's not take credit away from a priest in the 1600's that came up with the spoonful of sugar that made The Word go down easier for nearly 400 years of wriggling children.

 

<< previous
Print

 

 
 

 
Home