
I’ve always liked that phrase. It says so much about the things in the shadows that we can’t see, and how that plays with our imaginations. And nothing quite plays with our imaginations as much as Halloween. Humans have a long history with what to do with the dead, how to imagine death, and what the dead get up to once they are dead. Besides terrifying weather, earthquakes, floods, and volcanic eruptions, nothing gets us going—religiously speaking—like the dead.

But it wasn’t all pumpkins and Jack-O-Lanterns. In fact, pumpkins are New World fruit. So back in the Old World, Scotland to be exact, they carved out turnips. And believe me, those were far scarier than a smiling pumpkin (and really hard to carve. You’ll need a Dremel.) See below! Argh!




People have liked dressing up as these various creatures of imagination for a long time, either partly in fear of them, or to appease them. Halloween has its roots in the ancient, pre-Christian Gaelic festival of Samhain (pronounced SAH–wn), which was celebrated on the night of October 31. The Gaelic people, who lived 2,000 years ago in the area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom, and northern France, believed that the dead returned to earth on Samhain. People would gather to light bonfires, offer sacrifices, and pay homage to the dead.
During some Gaelic celebrations of Samhain, villagers disguised themselves in costumes made of animal skins to scare away unwanted ghostly visitors. In later centuries, people began dressing up as ghosts, and devils, and in exchange for food and drink, they’d romp about, entertaining the crowds. This custom was called “mumming”, and dates back to the Middle Ages, a precursor of trick-or-treating.
In later centuries, in Scotland and Ireland, young people took part in a tradition called “guising”, dressing up in costume and going from house to house, to receive a bribe of fruit, nuts, or even coins to perform some kind of “trick”—singing, reciting a poem, or something else—replacing the earlier custom of mumming.
Trick-or-Treating
Some American colonists celebrated Guy Fawkes Day–which commemorates the foiling of the Gunpowder Plot in 1605, a Catholic-led conspiracy to blow up England’s parliament building and remove Protestant King James I from power. In the mid-19th century, large numbers of new immigrants, especially those fleeing the Irish Potato Famine in the 1840s, helped popularize Halloween.
In the early 20th century, Irish and Scottish communities revived the Old World traditions of “souling” (people would pass out pastries called “soul cakes” in exchange for praying for the dead) and guising in the United States. By the 1920s, however, it had gotten out of hand. Pranks had become outright vandalism, acts of violence, and arson causing real damage amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars. If you remember the Halloween scenes in the Judy Garland movie, Meet Me In St. Louis and the bonfires and pranks the kids got up to, it could get pretty terrifying.

The earliest known reference to “trick or treat”, was printed in the November 4, 1927 edition of The Blackie, Alberta Canada Herald:
“Hallowe’en provided an opportunity for real strenuous fun. No real damage was done except to the temper of some who had to hunt for wagon wheels, gates, wagons, barrels, etc., much of which decorated the front street. The youthful tormentors were at back door and front demanding edible plunder by the word “trick or treat” to which the inmates gladly responded and sent the robbers away rejoicing.”

We’ve come a long way from our fear of those “beasties” in the dark. And maybe it’s a good thing. Or is it? I think we’ll always be a little afraid of things in the dark, things we can’t quite see, can’t quite understand. That’s what Halloween has been about all along.

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