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A Washington Tradition
NC Tree White
House Bound
North
Carolina is once again White House bound for
Christmas. For the 10th time since 1966, when the
tradition began, North Carolina will have the honor
of presenting a REAL Christmas tree – a perfect
Fraser fir - to the First Lady for display in the
White House Blue Room. Christmas Tree Grower Joe
Freeman & wife Linda will make their coveted journey
to Washington the week after Thanksgiving with a
tree from their Ashe county farm.
Joe & Linda won this honor by winning the Grand
Champion title at the National Christmas Tree
contest held in Portland Oregon in 2006. To be
eligible to enter a tree at the National competition
in Portland, Joe first won the North Carolina
Christmas Tree Association state contest.
Joe currently grows Fraser fir Christmas Trees at
Mistletoe Meadows, his 130 acre farm in Laurel
Springs North Carolina, approximately 5 miles from
the Blue Ridge parkway where he currently has
approximately 100,000 trees planted. He also has
additional tree farms in Virginia and in Moore
county N.C. Wholesale customers include retailers,
garden centers and fund raising groups. Joe owns and
operates a retail lot in Asheboro N.C. during the
retail selling season.
Mistletoe Meadows produces approximately 15,000
wreaths in 12 sizes each Christmas Season. Joe is a
member of the North Carolina Christmas tree
association, National Christmas Tree Association,
Ashe County Christmas Tree Growers Association, Mt
Rogers Christmas tree Growers Association, &
Virginia Christmas Tree Growers Association.
Joe was the NCCTA Grand champion Wreath maker in
1992, 1994, 1996 & 2002. He grew the NCCTA Grand
champion Tree in 2001. He also took top honors for
the National grand champion Wreath in 1998 and 2004.
Members of the White House staff will visit Joe’s
farm in October to hand pick this years selection.
The tree will be cut in late November and
transported to Washington D.C. for a formal
presentation to First Lady Laura Bush. The tree will
be decorated by the White house floral department
staff and volunteers.
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NC Fraser Fir in White House for 9th Time
Glorious
white lilies, crystal spheres and light-catching
garlands accented this 2005’s official White House
Christmas tree. The theme: “All Things Bright and
Beautiful”. The 18-foot Fraser fir was presented to
President and Mrs. Bush by Earl, Betsy, Buddy and
Meg Deal from the Smokey Holler Tree Farm in Laurel
Springs, North Carolina. The Deals won this honor by
being named the 2005 National Grand Champion Growers
by the National Christmas Tree Association.
Since the beginning of the program established by
the National Christmas Tree Association in 1966, a
North Carolina tree has won the competition nine
times and received the honor of being displayed in
the Blue Room of the White House – this is more
times than any other state. This is the top honor
for any Christmas tree grower and Earl Deal stated
that he has been waiting 30 years for this to
happen.
The Blue Room Christmas Tree was handpicked by
White House Chief Usher Gary Walters and Grounds
Foreman Mike Lawn on October 20, 2005. The tree was
cut in late November and sent to Washington, D.C.
The White House staff also selected two beautiful
North Carolina Fraser Fir Christmas Trees for the
White House Oval Office and the Bush family's
private residence. "The last time a Christmas tree
from North Carolina was displayed in the White House
was in 1997," Gary Walters said. "This beautiful
Fraser fir from the Deal family is the perfect tree
to continue this long-standing White House
tradition."
An active member of both NCTA and the North
Carolina Christmas Tree Association for more than 30
years, Earl credits both associations with providing
him with many learning opportunities that have
contributed to his success. "We had tagged this one
hoping it would be the one picked," Earl Deal said,
referring to the Fraser fir selected as the 2005
Blue Room Tree. "This is a dream come true. I think
every Christmas tree grower hopes that they will
someday provide a tree to the White House, but it's
still hard to believe that it will ever happen to
you."
Achieving this honor was no easy feat for the
Deals. In order to be eligible to enter the National
Contest, they first had to compete in the North
Carolina Christmas Tree Association competition. The
Deals' Fraser fir then competed against 22 other
entries at the national competition in Lake Harmony,
Penn., in order to earn the opportunity to present
the Blue Room Tree for display in the White House.
But the family agrees that it was worth all the time
and effort involved. "There is no higher honor in
this business," Earl said.
Earl first began planting Christmas Trees as a
hobby in Blowing Rock in 1972 with his cousin and
college roommate. At a NC Christmas Tree Association
meeting later that year, they met a gentleman
wanting to sell a stand of trees in Laurel Springs.
Looking at these trees in a very dense fog, they
thought the trees looked great and a deal was made.
When the sun came out, those trees looked a little
worse than they had on that foggy day back in the
hollow – thus the name Smokey Holler. At the time,
he was employed with the Department of Wood and
Paper Science at North Carolina State University,
while Betsy taught with the Wake County School
System. For a number of years, the Deal family
commuted from their home in Raleigh to the farm in
Laurel Springs on weekends and vacations to care for
the trees. Upon the couple's retirement, they became
permanent residents of Laurel Spring and full-time
Christmas tree growers.
The
Christmas trees grown at Smokey Holler Tree Farm are
sold wholesale to retailers along the East Coast,
from Miami to Long Island, and across the Midwest.
In addition, the family sells wreaths, garlands and
roping; operates retail lots in the Raleigh-Durham
area; and runs a Choose & Cut Christmas Tree farm on
part of their property. The couple's son, Buddy,
helps manage the farm operations, while their
daughter, Meg, serves as the certified public
accountant for the business and helps out during
harvest time. Over the years Smokey Holler has
branched out to not only grow trees such as Fraser
fir, White pine, Blue spruce, Concolor fir, Norway
spruce, and Canaan fir, but they also do wreaths and
roping to utilize low grade trees. Both Earl and
Buddy emphasize that they branched out so as not to
compromise the quality of the fresh Christmas trees
from their farm. The Deal motto is displayed in
their office: “Quality is in watching the details”
and the family believes that if they take care of
the details, the quality will come.
Betsy states that Earl teaches by example and
demands hard work. Either he or Buddy is in the
field daily with the crew. They actively participate
and work with the crew in overseeing trees. Earl
sees a large advantage in the fact that Buddy speaks
Spanish fluently and can converse easily with the
crew. Why all the working together? Earl states that
his vision for the farm is to have the Deal
“signature on their trees” and to have pride in the
end product.
The presentation of the Blue Room Christmas Tree
to the Mrs. Bush at the White House took place on
Monday, Nov. 28, 2005. The tree was set up later
that day and decorated by the White House Floral
Department staff and volunteers. The Deal family was
invited to return later in the afternoon to the
White House to help decorate the tree and see it on
display in the Blue Room. "This whole experience has
been extremely humbling for our family," Earl said.
"We feel that we are not only representing our farm
but also the entire Christmas tree industry and we
are so grateful for this opportunity."
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Previous White House Winners
| 1971 |
Kermit Johnson |
Avery County |
| 1973 |
Homer & Bruner
Sides |
Alleghany
County |
| 1982 |
Hal & Sarah
Johnson |
Ashe County |
| 1984 |
Hal & Sarah
Johnson |
Ashe County |
| 1990 |
R. Bruce &
Michael Lacey |
Avery County |
| 1993 |
Wayne Ayers |
Mitchell
County |
| 1995 |
Ron Hudler &
Danny Dollar |
Ashe County |
| 1997 |
Sanford Fishel |
Ashe County |
| 2005 |
Earl, Betsy, &
Buddy Deal |
Alleghany
County |
| 2007 |
Joe Freeman |
Ashe County |
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A Washington Tradition
Did you know that there hasn't always been a
Christmas tree in the White House? In fact, the
first time a tree was brought in and decorated at
the presidential mansion was in 1856. This was when
Franklin Pierce, the 14th president, was in office.
It did not become an established tradition to have a
tree until the 1880s.
When Theodore Roosevelt was in office, he banned
Christmas trees from the White House because he
thought that Christmas tree harvesting was depleting
our National forests. His two young sons brought one
into the White House and were sent to the most
famous conservationist of his time, Gifford Pinchot,
for a lecture. Mr. Pinchot defended the cutting of
Christmas trees by saying that for every tree cut
down, two are replanted, which actually replenished
the forests.
The National Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony
began in 1923. President Calvin Coolidge started
what has become an annual holiday observance on the
White House lawn by lighting the first National
Christmas tree.
One of the country's best known original tree
growers was also a president. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt helped to popularize the concept of
growing Christmas trees on a plantation by growing
Christmas trees on his estate in Hyde Park, NY,
throughout the 1930s.
Every other year, the National Christmas Tree
Association holds a Christmas Tree Competition.
Winners of this competition provide the Christmas
tree for the White House. The North Carolina Fraser
fir has won this competition more than any other
species.
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