
Today is Halloween, the day to fun and scary things, and of course, trick or treat. But where did this holiday come from? According to the book Holiday Symbols (found in the Library) "Halloween can be traced directly back to the SAMHAIN, the ancient Celtic harvest festival honoring the Lord of the Dead. Observed on November 1 in the British Isles and parts of what is now France, Samhain also marked the beginning of the Celtic New Year. Beacuse it was a time of transition between the old and the new, the Celts believed that the souls of those who had died during the previous year gathered to travel together to the land of the dead. They lit bonfires and sacrificed fruits and vegetables, hoping to win the favor of the spirits of the decased and to avoid their punishments. Sometimes the living disguised themselves in masks and costumes so that the spirits of the dead wouldn't recognize them...By the fourth century, the Christian church was doing everything it could to stamp out pagan festivals like Samhain, but the Celts wouldn't give up their ancient rituals and symbols. So the Christian church gave them new names and meanings. November 1 became All Saints' Day (All Hallows' Day in England), a celebration of all the Christian saints. The night of October 31 became All Hallows'Eve (later Halloween). But is association with the supernatural persisted. Halloween came to America with the Irish immigrants of the 1840's."
Source: Thompson, Sue Ellen, ed. Holiday Symbols: A guide to the Legend and Lord Behind the People, Places, Food, Animals, And Other Symbols Associated with the Holidays and Holy Days, Feasts and Fasts, and Other Celebrations, Covering Popular, Ethnic, Religious, National, and Ancient Events, and Observed in the United States and Around the World. Detroit, MI: Omnigraphics, 1998.
- Chambers, R., ed. The Book of Days. London : W&R Chambers, 1906?
- New Catholic Encyclopedia New York : McGraw-Hill, 1967-1979
- Etzion, Amitai. We are What We Celebrate: Understanding Holidays and Rituals New York University Press, 2004.
- Harper, Wilhelmina. Ghosts and Goblins: Stories for Halloween. E.P. Dutton, 1965.
Other sources are:





