THE ANTIQUE CHRISTMAS LIGHT MUSEUM 
presents a 
 TIMELINE
 
oF AMERICAN
CHRISTMAS
LIGHTING 
       
Detailing Important Events in the History of the American Christmas Lighting 
Industry
  
    
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    1880-1910 | 
    
    1910-1920 | 
    
    1920-1930 | 
    
    1930-1940 | 
    
    1940-1950 | 
    
    1950-1960 | 
    
    1960-1970 | 
   
  
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1882: 
Edward Johnson, a business associate of Thomas 
Edison, electrically lights a Christmas tree for the first time. 
1892:
The General Electric Company was founded. 
The Company bought the patent rights to Edison's light bulb  
and his light bulb factory. 
1895: 
The first electrically lighted Christmas tree was displayed in the White House. 
This event was instrumental in  
bringing the wonder of electric Christmas tree lighting to the awareness of the 
general public. 
1898: 
General Electric used their famous logo, the script GE letters in a circle, for 
the first time. It was registered  
on September 18, 1900. 
1900: 
The earliest known
            advertisement for lamps to be used on Christmas Trees, 
            sponsored by General Electric. 
 It appeared in the November 28, 1900 
            edition of Scientific American Magazine. The 
            advertising offered to either sell or 
rent  the light bulbs for Christmastime use! 
1901:
The first commercially available light sets are offered, but mainly to 
businesses interested in attracting  
attention in their storefront windows. These sets were sometimes socket-less, 
and had to be hand wired. 
1903-1904: 
The first sets of pre-wired lights intended for Christmas trees were offered to 
the public by General Electric.  
The outfits included miniature base GE/Edison carbon filament lamps, with 
prominent exhaust tips at the top of the  
glass envelopes.   
1907: 
Tungsten, a more efficient material for light bulb filaments was first used in 
the manufacture of light bulbs.  
Due to high cost, the material was not yet utilized in Christmas tree lamps. 
1909: 
It is about this time that figural Christmas lights were introduced in the 
United States. The earliest lamps were  
imported from Austria and Germany. 
1909: 
The "MAZDA" name was first used by General Electric. 
The name was taken from Persian mythology: the  
female Ahura Mazda being the god of light.  It was soon licensed by Westinghouse 
as well, and became accepted 
by the buying public as a sign of quality and long life.  
1910: 
The General Electric Company begins to change the shape of their Christmas lamps 
from the traditional  
pear shape to a perfectly round globe. The lamps still had an exhaust tip at the 
top, and still used carbon filaments. 
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1912:
The General Electric Company now uses and licenses the MAZDA trademark 
exclusively for the new tungsten  
filament lamps, and does not allow its use with carbon filament lamps. Tungsten 
burns more evenly and lasts far longer  
than carbon filaments. 
 
1912: 
The American Ever Ready Company sells their first Christmas lighting sets.
CLICK HERE for a brief history of the 
company. 
 
1916: 
The first common use of tungsten filaments in Christmas light bulbs begins. 
General Electric first uses tungsten  
filaments in their globe shaped Christmas lamps. Tungsten filament globe lights 
can be found either with or without 
the exhaust tip on them. Soon, many Christmas lighting outfit manufacturers 
proudly proclaim the inclusion of MAZDA 
lamps in their strings. In the famous advertising paintings for General Electric 
Mazda Lamps done by Maxfield Parrish,  
there are often women depicted in flowing robes, a tribute to the heritage of 
the trademark. 
1918: 
The use of carbon filaments in American manufactured Christmas light bulbs 
virtually disappears. Carbon filaments 
 were still being offered in less expensive imported figural lamps. 
1920: 
General Electric offers for the first time a flame or cone shaped Christmas 
lamp, with a tungsten filament. This 
shape was soon to become the industry standard, manufactured until the early 
1970s. The earliest of these cones 
are smooth and slightly larger than the later lamps which are ribbed.  
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1921:
The infant Underwriters Laboratories first tested and established standards 
for American electric Christmas light  
strings. The UL safety designation quickly became an effective sales and 
marketing tool. The earliest outfits merely  
state that they are "Approved Lighting Outfits", while later sets carried the 
familiar UL seal of approval, either printed on  
the box or found on a paper tag on the cord.  
1922:
The round globe lamps are discontinued by General Electric, in favor 
of the now popular cone shape. 
1922: 
The Japanese begin offering huge quantities of figural lamps molded in milk 
glass. Paint adhered better to this  
glass, and when it did flake off the light was still a bit more attractive than 
the clear glass type. These milk glass lights  
did not have the superior detail of the Austrian and German lamps, but due to 
the fact that they were machine-made,  
their cost was far less. Within a few years, the Japanese figurals dominated the 
market. 
1923:
Lester Haft, an employee of the C.D. Wood Electric Company, invented 
the "Tri-Plug" or  "Tatchon" connector  
for Christmas lights. It was intended to facilitate the interconnection of 
several  strands of lights. There were two  
versions, one for the familiar bladed plugs and another that accepted the 
earliest form of screw-in type connectors.  
CLICK HERE for more information on this invention 
that forever changed the American Christmas lighting industry. 
1924:
The smooth cone lamps by General Electric and Westinghouse are 
replaced by the slightly smaller ribbed  
or textured variety. These lamps continued to be made, virtually unchanged, 
until the early 1970s.  
1925: 
A trade association is formed by 15 of the firms then engaged in Christmas 
lighting manufacture. All of these  
companies also held licenses for the Tri-Plug connection device. The trade group 
is named The National Outfit  
Manufacturing Association, or NOMA. 
1926:
The above named trade association members officially merged into a 
single company, becoming the  
now-famous NOMA Electric Corporation. It was the 
largest Christmas lighting company in the world, and is  
still a licensed trademark today. CLICK HERE for 
more information on this company. 
1926: 
Eugene Kukla invented a small wooden bead, usually painted red (and sometimes, 
but rarely, found in green  
and even blue) that was attached below the outfit light sockets and served to 
hold the lamp upright on tree branches.  
It was a common but incorrect belief that Christmas light bulbs would burn 
longer in an upright position. Originally  
offered by the M. Propp company on their lighting outfits, NOMA became the owner 
of the rights to manufacture the  
beads through the 1927 merger with Propp, and trademarked them as "Berry 
Beads".  
1927: 
General Electric first used the large, intermediate size base for their new 
outdoor Christmas light bulbs. The outfits  
consisted of 7 lamps, and were wired in parallel so that the failure of a single 
lamp would not affect the rest. The earliest  
of these lights are round, but by 1928 they were the familiar swirled or flame 
shape. Also, the early lamps were painted on  
the outside, but later issues feature a scratchproof inside color. These lamps 
are still made today, although they are once  
again smooth rather than textured, and the color is on the outside. It is 
interesting to note that General Electric and the  
various Edison Electric distribution companies sponsored many neighborhood 
"decorating with color-light" contests,  
in an effort to induce sales of the new outfits. Their strategy worked quite 
well, as within several years communities all  
over the United States held friendly outdoor decorating competitions at 
Christmastime.  
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1932:
General Electric offers bell shaped lamps for the first time. These are 
called by collectors "MAZDA Bells". 
1934: 
General Electric first offers their new, candelabra based lamps for indoor use. 
These are cooler burning, and 
are parallel wired so the failure of a single lamp will not affect the operation 
of others in the string. NOMA and 
ClemCo first sold sets with these new C-7 lamps. The sets were slow in gaining 
acceptance, as a major disadvantage  
was their high manufacturing cost. Parallel wired indoor lighting sets did not 
become popular until after  
the end of World War II.  
1935: 
General Electric introduced their new candle shaped lamps. These lamps had a 
major disadvantage in that the  
filaments often burned quite close to the glass envelope, creating a circular 
burn spot in the paint of the lamp.  
1939: 
March of this year saw the formation of NOMA Electric Company Limited in the 
United Kingdom, a company  
still in business and still manufacturing Christmas lights today. 
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1941-1945:
World War II begins. No Christmas lights are manufactured 
throughout the War years, and many of the 
smaller lighting companies, unable to convert their factories to Wartime 
materials production, go out of business or  
are swallowed up by the larger companies, such as NOMA and Paramount. 
1946:
General Electric drops the use of the trademark name MAZDA on its 
light bulbs.  
1946: 
Sylvania first introduced their fluorescent Christmas lights. An unattractive 
milky white in the box, they glow  
with wonderful pastel colors when power is 
applied. The sets were expensive, selling for $6.95 (around $50.00 today),  
and 
were not big sellers. 
1946: 
NOMA first markets their famous Bubble Lights. Unable to hold a patent on them, 
many other companies offer  
their own bubbling light sets by 1947. 
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1950: 
About this year, Americans were introduced to the now universal miniature or 
"Fairy Lights". First  produced  
in Italy, other countries soon followed, including Germany, Holland and Japan. 
The earliest of these sets have no  
bases and are direct wired into the light string. Later sets used tiny screw-in 
bases, with companies finally progressing  
to the familiar plastic base push-in lamps. The lights were never produced n 
America. Huge amounts of imported sets  
begin to have a dramatic effect of the American Christmas Lighting Industry.  
1951: 
General Electric switches to the use of aluminum for their lamp bases. Most of 
the other lighting companies  
soon follow.  
1953: 
Several companies offer "expanded" series wired light sets, consisting of 15-20 
miniature base lamps that  
were smaller than the traditional cone lamps. They did not remain on the market 
long, as the midget or "Fairy" lights  
were gaining in popularity.  
1955: 
This year saw the first widespread appearance of "Twinkling Lamps", candelabra 
based units with the flasher  
built in to the lamp. Introduced in Japan, General Electric and Westinghouse 
soon offered their own varieties, both  
with transparent paint. The earliest of the flashing lamps have a larger globe 
size than normal, and have inside,  
solid color paint.  
1956:
Low-voltage transformer outfits appear on the market. These were high-quality 
outfits, and were run from  
a transformer, which to some made decorating a bit difficult.  They sold for 
about $7.00 a set, which was expensive  
for the time, and was probably one reason they disappeared from the market by 
about 1963. 
1957:
General Electric first offers the globe shaped Lighted Ice bulbs. A 
popular offering, these lamps can still be 
found today.  
 
1959: The Aluminum Specialty 
Company first introduced the aluminum Christmas tree to a somewhat confused  
American public. Marketed as a permanent tree, sales were somewhat less than 
stellar. Electric tree lights then  
available on the market could not be used with these new trees, due to safety 
concerns. The only way to light them 
was with a spotlight, or rotating color wheel. 
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1960: 
The Aluminum Specialty Company offered its flagship aluminum tree, The 
Evergleam. Sales really took off. 
Since aluminum is an excellent conductor of electricity, standard lighting 
outfits could not be used. As mentioned  
directly above, spotlights or rotating color wheels had to be used. The aluminum 
tree became so popular with 
Americans, that sales of strings of electric lights took a nosedive, severely 
impacting an industry already struggling 
with offshore competition. 
1963: 
General Electric offers 100% American made lighting outfits, advertising that 
this is the first time the  
company has ever sold lighting outfits that were entirely GE manufactured. 
1965:
NOMA, the largest Christmas lighting company in the world, files for bankruptcy.  
1970: 
By this time, almost all Christmas lighting outfits are foreign made. NOMA is no 
longer the major company
 
it once was, and in fact is a trademark name only. Americans are lighting their 
trees almost exclusively with  
imported miniature lights. 
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