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The Christmas Tree Ship

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Back in the late 1800s, Chicago really loved Christmas trees, but not everyone could afford one. Every December, people along Lake Michigan would watch for a familiar sight: a beat-up old schooner rolling into the harbor, stacked way too high with evergreen trees.

That ship belonged to Captain Herman Schuenemann.

Schuenemann was a sailor and tree seller, but mostly he was just a decent guy. He’d cut fir trees up in Michigan and Wisconsin, load them onto his ship, and sail them down to Chicago to sell. But here’s the thing—he didn’t just sell them. He gave a lot of them away. If you were poor, widowed, or had kids who’d never had a tree before, chances are Captain Santa (yep, that’s what people called him) made sure you got one.

In 1912, he headed out on one last trip on his ship, the Rouse Simmons. The weather was already getting ugly, and people warned him not to go. Lake Michigan in late fall is no joke. But Schuenemann didn’t want to miss Christmas—people were counting on those trees.

A big storm hit. The ship went down.

When news finally reached Chicago, people were heartbroken. Weeks later, when Schuenemann’s body was found, he was still wearing his heavy coat, and there were pine needles in his pockets. Even then, he was literally carrying Christmas.

Chicago never forgot him. His story stuck, and eventually it turned into a tradition. Every year now, a ship sails into Chicago with Christmas trees from northern Michigan, and those trees are given to families who need them—just like Captain Schuenemann used to do.

It’s one of those stories that sticks with you because it’s not flashy. It’s just about a guy who kept showing up, year after year, doing something kind—and doing it even when it was hard.

Every year I try to pick a word or a phrase.  For 2025, it was “intention.”  For 2026, I think I’ll take a up a bit of Captain Santa’s philosophy, “Do something kind.”

What are your words for 2026?

 

Sources
https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2006/winter/christmas-tree.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rouse_Simmons

 

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Comments

  1. Lois Elling  December 29, 2025

    What a wonderful story! I’m glad the city has continued the tradition.