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29th ANNUAL CHRISTMAS IN THE PARK
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RUTH S. DUNNING MEMORIAL, c. 1890
Leaded-glass window
Tiffany Studios
(74-008)
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Thursday, Dec. 6, 6-8 p.m.
(Rain date Dec. 7)
Each year, on the first Thursday of December, the Morse Museum helps launch the holiday season in Winter Park
when it lights up Tiffany windows in Central Park and presents the Bach Festival Choir in concert.
The nine leaded-glass windows installed in the park set the stage for a free outdoor concert of
seasonal favorites by the 150-voice Bach Festival Choir, one of America's premier oratorio ensembles.
Eight of the windows are memorials with religious themes produced by Tiffany
Studios for the chapel constructed in 1908 for the Association for the Relief of Respectable Aged Indigent Females in New York.
The Association was founded in 1814 by a group of wealthy New Yorkers as a genteel private
charity for elderly, indigent women, including widows of soldiers who fought in the
War of 1812 and the Revolution. The first residence, constructed in 1838, was an alternative
to the common almshouse. An expanded building was designed 30 years later by Richard Morris
Hunt, architect to the rich and famous of the late-19th century.
When the residence was threatened with demolition in 1974, Hugh and Jeannette McKean bought its
Tiffany chapel windows at the request of the Association board. The windows are memorials to
prominent women who it is believed supported the Association in some way. The Association
residence is now on the National Register of Historic Places.
Tiffany Studios' Christmas Eve window, c. 1902, in which a figure resembling Father Christmas
holds the Christ child, is also on view at the event and in the Morse Museum following
Christmas in the Park. The window was designed by Thomas Nast Jr. — son of the famous political cartoonist —
for his sister's home in New Rochelle, New York.
Christmas in the Park was started by the McKeans in 1979 as a way to share a part of their rare Tiffany
collection with the public in an informal setting.
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