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Wilson and his committee presented their plan to the Chandler Community Coordinating Council in September.  The plan called for improvements to the displays in the Downtown park and along Arizona Avenue.  Several main decorations were suggested:  banners placed over the roads entering the city, decorations mounted on light poles, a “modern tumbleweed Christmas tree,” an animated Santa with his reindeer, a nativity that would fill most of the west half of the park, and a western themed Christmas display.  The Wilson Report, as the plan was called, was eagerly accepted by the Coordinating Council.  The Business and Professional Women’s Club of Chandler was tasked with raising the necessary funds.

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The greatest excitement for the new displays centered around the light pole decorations.  The previous year, Barnum had designed several four foot wide wreaths made from cotton bolls and painted silver, which he had used to decorate his home and the Nazarene Church.  The wreaths were the talk of the town.  The committee’s plan was to make 80 cotton boll wreaths and mount them on every light pole in Downtown and along Arizona Avenue.  The Chandler Arizonan newspaper printed weekly updates on the construction progress of the wreaths until they were put on display on December 2.  From that point, the newspaper accounts gushed over the uniqueness and beauty that the wreaths brought to Downtown.

The Tumbleweed Tree, the focus of our celebrations today, seemed like an afterthought and gained little attention in the newspaper.  Construction updates were non-existent, and mere mention of the tree was scarce.  It was not until the Christmas edition of the paper was printed that a photo of the tree finally appeared.  A community sing was held surrounding the tree, but the advertisement for the event failed to mention the unique aspect that the tree was not pine, but rather tumbleweed.  The only mention of Barnum and the first Tumbleweed Tree together appears in the Phoenix Gazette, which listed him as Chandler’s “decoration designer.”

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It seems to have taken three years for the community to think of the Tumbleweed Tree as the central aspect of Chandler’s holiday decorations.  By 1959, the Arizonan newspaper was boasting about the “great Tumbleweed Tree,” and the excitement over the cotton boll wreaths had disappeared as the decorating committee returned to traditional green wreaths.  The Arizonan even suggested that readers send photos and postcards of the tree to friends and relatives around the country in order to spread its renown.

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