Mullens Holiday Decorations Contest Cuts Through COVID Fears To Bring Holiday Cheer

Communities across the world are getting creative to celebrate the holidays while addressing COVID concerns. In Wyoming County, West Virginia, an annual parade of lights was cancelled. Instead, Mullens Area Chamber of Commerce members encouraged residents and businesses to participate in a holiday decorations contest.

On the corners of most streets in Mullens, you’ll hear silver bells, well — silver speakers — playing Christmas music.

That’s also where you’ll find holiday displays from businesses for this year’s contest. The City of Mullens usually hosts the contest but this year, the Mullens Area Chamber hosted the contest. This year’s business winner was State Farm Insurance.

Charlene Cook
/
State Farm Insurance placed first in the 2020 Mullens Area Chamber of Commerce Business Holiday Decorating Contest.

It’s a holiday tradition for many families in the region to venture to town and check out the lights.

Making Mullens Merry and Bright

John Morgan lives on one of the side streets in city limits.

John Morgan
/
A dogwood tree decorated with Christmas lights on Church Street in Mullens, WV in December 2020.

“I just start going up the tree with the lights and then I go up and then I see a gap,” Morgan said, “and then I got to go buy more lights. I keep working my way all the way around the tree and then the globes, the ornaments just kind of come this year and that year.”

He’s just about finished putting up his display for 2020.

“I couldn’t find any more lights,” Morgan said as he laughed. “Mullens is sold out.”

The community seems to have rallied behind another holiday tradition hosted by the chamber, the holiday decorating contest.

“I think everybody has had enough of the COVID-19 and being stuck in a house and wanting some Christmas spirit,” Morgan said. “You know, celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ is what it’s all about. But being out and making things as pretty as you can in your neighborhood is part of the Christmas season.”

The vice president of the Mullens Area Chamber of Commerce, Cathy Huff, lives right next door to the Morgan’s.

“It seems like this year, everybody’s just really excited about it,” Cathy said. “And Mullens is really, really decorated. I mean, you can drive around at night and the lights are absolutely beautiful. I’m so proud of everybody.”

But you won’t find the winner of this year’s residential contest in town.

A Luminous Love Story

Cleadus Earl Thomas lives just across the railroad tracks before you get to town. Most folks call him Earl.

“Well, I’ve got about a little over 12,000 lights up,” Thomas said. “I buy strands and usually there’s just 100 bulbs to string like 20 foot long. I just mostly count the strands that I put up. I put up over 115 strands so.”

Thomas is 83 years-old, and he’s been putting up holiday lights since he first built his house in 1997.

Jessica Lilly
/
Cleadus Earl Thomas at his home December, 2020.

“My wife, she really liked Christmas,” he said. “ And so we basically I just put them up, for her, for the kids, grandkids. But it does take quite a bit of time.”

Until this year, he thought he wasn’t eligible to enter the Mullens decorating contest.

“Most of the time I think it was for the town,” Thomas said. “And then they said well, ‘you’re not in city limits,’ so they wouldn’t include you.”

This year, the contest was hosted by the Mullens Area Chamber of Commerce, which opened up the contest to folks outside of city limits.

Either way, Thomas’s display can’t be ignored. It’s gotten a reputation in the community and it should. In mid-December a ladder was leaned on the gutters on the front of Thomas’s house. He had just gotten down from checking the bulbs.

Courtesy
/
Earl Thomas won the 2020 Mullens Area Chamber of Commerce Residential Holiday Lights Contest.

“I just got there at one time to try to fix that section that was out and you got to take the bulbs out and try to do one that burns. See if it burns and switch them in and out until you get the bad one.”

His wife passed away in 2013. But there’s no doubt she’d be proud to know that Thomas was finally recognized by the Mullens Area Chamber for his impressive holiday display. As for Earl, he says he’s just glad to know that someone sees the lights so his work isn’t in vain.

“It would just make it, maybe little bit of effort paid off,” Thomas said. “Well at least somebody’s looking at them.”

Charlene Cook
/
Complete Bookkeeping Solutions placed second in the Mullens Area Chamber of Commerce Business Holiday Lights competition in Mullens in December 2020.

Meet The West Virginian Responsible For The Classic Christmas Song, 'Frosty the Snowman'

The man behind the lyrics of Frosty the Snowman, Peter Cottontail, and Smokey the Bear is none other than West Virginian, Jack Rollins. His song about a magical snowman coming to life and bringing holiday cheer can be heard almost everywhere this time of year. In 2011, Rollins was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame.

Jack Rollins – West Virginia Music Hall Of Fame Induction

Rollins, who’s also known as the real Frosty the Snowman, was born in Scottdale, Pennsylvania on September 15, 1906, but he moved to Keyser, West Virginia with his family when he was three or four years old. He ended up growing up in Keyser and as an adult lived in New York, California, and Ohio, but West Virginia was always special to him.

“Your home is where your heart is, and his mother and his brother settled in Keyser, West Virginia,” said Rollins fan, Champ Zumbrun, “and he would come home at every opportunity while his mother was alive. In fact, if you go to [the] cemetery, he’s buried next to his mother.”

Zumbrun wrote an article in 2011 about Rollins’ life that was published in Allegany Magazine in Cumberland, Maryland. He’s a retired forest ranger from Maryland and he’s also a musician.

While working as a forester, he performed Jack Rollins’ song, Smokey the Bear every weekend for more than 30 years.

In 2011, Zumbrun received a surprising phone call.

“The chief of the Smokey Bear Program nationally learned that Jack Rollins, who wrote Smokey the Bear was going to be inducted to the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame,” remembered Zumbrun, “and they were reaching out to the National Forest Service office to find out some information about Jack Rollins, and since I had been researching Jack Rollins, they contacted me, and connected me with the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame, and they asked if I would share my information with them, and I said sure, anything to help Jack out.”

 

The West Virginia Music Hall of Fame also learned about Zumbrun’s history singing Smokey the Bear, so the group asked him if he would sing at Rollins’ induction ceremony. Zumbrun said yes.

The West Virginia Music Hall of Fame was, however, still looking for a family member to accept the award on Rollins’ behalf.

Credit Wikimedia Commons
/
A Little Golden Book’s storybook edition based on the 1950 song of the same name. Cover art illustrated by Corinne Malvern.

That’s when Jack Rollins’ grandson, James Busemeyer from Ohio, came forward to accept the award for his grandfather.

The song has become a classic. This time of year, we hear Frosty the Snowman playing on radio, television, movies, and in shopping centers.

It was written in 1950, but is still so popular today, and Champ Zumbrun knows why.

“Because I think people always need songs that are happy and have a message of joy and that’s what Jack was all about. If you want to know Jack Rollins just look at the lyrics in his songs. They’re happy, they’re innocent, they’re full of joy. I think people always need to celebrate and be reminded that life’s not drudgery, and there’s a spirit in life that’s  joyful, and those songs if you listen to them are joyful, happy songs.”

The music of Frosty the Snowman, Peter Cottontail, and Smokey the Bear was composed by Rollins’ partner, Steve Nelson.

Walter E. “Jack” Rollins died on January 1, 1973.

Christmas Festival in Historic Shepherdstown

The annual “Christmas in Shepherdstown” festival continues tomorrow evening. A Civil War Christmas comes to Shepherdstown this weekend, with music, dance, carriage rides, and lectures all about the town at Christmastime during the Civil War.

Saturday morning will feature the annual Shepherdstown Christmas parade. During the festival, many landmarks throughout the town will host special events.

The festival began last weekend after Thanksgiving celebrating a 21st Century celebration in Shepherdstown, the second weekend looks at the Civil War, the third looks at James Rumsey and the late 18th Century in Shepherd’s Town, and the fourth features Christmas in Mecklenburg, the original name of the town, where re-enactors will be found strolling the streets.

Other Christmas themed events will be hosted throughout the eastern panhandle during December, including Olde Tyme Christmas in Harpers Ferry, events in Berkeley Springs, and parades in Charles Town and Martinsburg.

Exit mobile version