Halloween Fun Facts, Trivia and History

Halloween Trivia and Fun Facts

  • Orange and black are Halloween colors because orange represents the hall harvest and black the coming colder winter darkness – and death.
  • In the 21st century, there are six full-moon Halloweens: 2001, 2020, 2039, 2058, 2077, and 2096.
  • Halloween is the second-biggest commercial holiday in the United States, second only to Christmas.
  • Less than 25% of American parents admit they eat their children’s candy.
  • Pumpkins are a… Fruit!
  • Pumpkin Spice is a seasonal favorite – most pumpkins are produced in Illinois, although Waimanalo Country Farms in Hawaii also offers them for the state.
  • Valentine’s Day is the third biggest Candy Holiday. Easter and Halloween are close, and either one can be the biggest in any given year.
  • Halloween’s scarecrows are leftover from farming and the harvesting season.

Halloween History

Halloween is probably the longest-running holiday with a set day or time period. The earliest celebration of the day was Samhain, a celebration of the harvest. The harvest was held with thought to the upcoming winter, which undoubtedly would bring death to many due to the coming cold season. So winter became a time of acknowledging death for the pagan Celtics.
Officially, the holiday is spelled Hallowe’en

Since they knew death was coming, they figured why not celebrate the inevitable with the Festival of the Dead. Some Celtic cults dressed as evil entities to either scare the real evil spirits away or to hide among them. This started about 2,000 years ago, in the (now) the United Kingdom/Northern France region of the world.

All Martyrs Day had been a celebration held on May 13, since 609 AD, when the Church moved the holiday to November first about a hundred years later. By the year 1000 AD, the Church had expanded rather successfully to the Celtic area, which we now call Ireland and Scotland, and much of the British Isles, and renamed the day “All Souls Day,” moving it to November 2nd.

What is a “Hallow”?
– A Hallow is a saint (holy person)

A key reason for the move was to replace the Celtic Festival of the Dead in the area. It became known as All Saints Day, said as ‘Alholomesse’ in Middle English, becoming ‘All-hallows’ or ‘All-hallowmas’ to the locals. The name eventually evolved to “Halloween,” replacing the traditional Celtic Samhain holiday, part of the Festival of the Dead Celebration. With the rise of the Protestant Church, which allowed for no saints, All-hallows Day disappeared with non-Catholic Christian denominations.

The carved and lit veggies we now call Jack’O’Lanterns may have been started with an Irish legend. Jack, a conman and drunk, convinced the devil, we’re told, to change himself into a coin so he could pay for a drink. Jack instead put the coin in his pocket next to a silver cross, which trapped the devil, preventing him from changing himself back. Jack agreed to free the devil on the condition that the devil would not bother Jack for a year.

Turnips were the first jack-o-lanterns, probably in Ireland. North America introduced the mach-beggir pumpkin lanterns.

In part two of Jack’s game with the devil, Jack tricks the devil into climbing a tree to fetch a piece of fruit. While the devil was up in the tree, Jack carved a cross into the trunk, trapping the devil in the tree. In order to get out of the tree, the devil promised Jack that he would no longer seek his soul. When Jack eventually died, he was not allowed into heaven because of his drunken and wicked ways, but he was not allowed into hell either, because the devil kept his word.

The devil gave Jack an ember to light his way in the dark, in respect to the man who bested him twice. The fire was kept in a hollowed-out turnip for Jack to carry on his endless journey, trapped in the mortal world.

In America, the Puritans and Pilgrims were a very religious bunch, and they didn’t believe much in any types of celebrations, let alone any based on pagan rituals, but a little further south, in Maryland and the more southern colonies, the American version of Halloween began, including ‘bobbing for apples,’ which was a tradition started virtually in the First Century with Roman’s holiday honoring Pomona, the goddess of fruits and trees, got mixed in with the Samhain celebrations. Her symbol was an apple.

In the 1600s, Halloween was still very connected to the fall harvest – Thanksgiving was far from a regular holiday at that point in time. The celebration became an event when people would talk about the harvest, and with All-Souls/Saints day just ahead, remember the dead, as they did in Ireland and Scotland. In the old world, they carved turnips or gourds open and used them as small lanterns to help. In Maryland, by 1835 or so, they were carving pumpkins, creating much beggir lanterns, and making it a celebratory ‘play party.’

The concept of ‘trick or treating’ also had its beginnings with Samhain, as evil fairies would seek gifts and food before the winter cold – doing mischief to those who would not donate. This was probably the foundation for ‘mischief night’ or ‘devil’s night,’ in which people started participating in on the night Guy Fawkes was caught attempting to blow up England’s parliament.

An average of two pieces of candy are given to children in North America on Hallweeen Night

In modern America, this ‘devil’s night’ would often be the night before Halloween, when young people would throw eggs at houses, write with soap on cars, or ‘toilet paper’ neighborhoods. The practice was slowed in recent years as the ‘mischief’ escalated to fires, broken windows, and other personal property damage.

Today trick or treaters are almost always given a treat by households with a light on, or a ghoul or vampire waiting by the door with a bag of candies or treats. In the interest of safety, edible gifts are almost always prepackaged, as are the costumes.

“Perhaps the most famous icon of the holiday is the jack-o-lantern. Various authorities attribute it to either Scottish or Irish origin. However, it seems clear that it was used as a lantern by people who traveled the road this night, the scary face to frighten away spirits or faeries who might otherwise lead one astray.

Set on porches and in windows, they cast the same spell of protection over the household. (The American pumpkin seems to have superseded the European gourd as the jack-o-lantern of choice.)

“Bobbing for apples may well represent the remnants of a Pagan ‘baptism’ rite called a ‘seining’, according to some writers. The water-filled tub is a latter-day Cauldron of Regeneration, into which the novice’s head is immersed. The fact that the participant in this folk game was usually blindfolded with hands tied behind the back also puts one in mind of a traditional Craft initiation ceremony.”
– Mike Nichols