The Palo Alto History Project
Christmas Tree Lane
                                                                                                
                                                                                                             Fulton Street
Christmas Tree Lane: A Palo Alto Tradition

While Palo Alto has many of the attractions that you would expect to find in a big city --- thriving shopping
districts, rich cultural life, world-class restaurants and cafes --- it has also retained many of the charming
traits of a ‘50s era small town.  The city government has to get some of the credit for this by working hard in
the past few decades to limit growth, maintain historic buildings and generally keep construction at a human-
sized scale (the few exceptions like City Hall and the Palo Alto Office Center stick out like sore thumbs).
There are scenes in today’s Palo Alto which can appear surprisingly quaint for a city that lies in the heart of
new-age Silicon Valley.

Picture a crossing guard waving a swarm of middle school bikers across Embarcadero as they ride back
home to their neighborhoods from Jordan. Or think of Saturday night on University Avenue as movie-goers
stroll from the Stanford Theatre hosting a Jimmy Stewart revival, past diagonally parked cars to get a treat
from Gelato Classico.  Very Norman Rockwell.

But nothing Palo Alto has to offer can out-Rockwell Christmas Tree Lane --- AKA Fulton Street --- where,
in 1940, neighbors spontaneously decided to decorate the 2 blocks from Embarcadero to Seale Avenue
with Christmas trees and lights.  More than 60 years later, on any night during the holiday season, you can
see dozens of cars slowly rolling down Fulton Street with just their parking lights on, children’s noses
pressed against the back window, taking in the small town Christmas cheer.

This Palo Alto tradition began around a bridge game when Judge Edward Hardy, Mr. George English and
their wives decided to do something to bring a little more yuletide merriment to the neighborhood.  Hardy
later said he “wished to promote Christmas joy throughout the holidays…and to foster a similar spirit
through the community and Palo Alto.”  They set up stakes along the length of the street adorned with 54
miniature Douglas firs decorated with Christmas lights.

Over six decades Christmas Tree Lane has survived as homeowners have come and gone, occasional tree
rustlers have struck and lights were extinguished for war-time regulations in 1942 and during the energy crisis
of 1973.  Some decorations have also become reappearing favorites.  The seven dwarfs have been seen
sliding down the roof and peering in the windows at 1850 Fulton since the late 1940s and Santa Claus has
been climbing the chimney at 1830 Fulton (Judge Hardy’s old home) since 1947.  

Today the tradition not only lives on, but has gotten better. Decorated houses have become increasingly
intricate and now include some festive smurfs at 1716 Fulton, a lighted star 70 feet high in a redwood tree at
#1801 and a “Night Before Christmas” display at # 1746.  City utility crews change all streetlights on the
lane from white to red, elementary school carolers sometimes sing for passers-by, and Christmastreelane.org
has added a Silicon Valley touch to an old-fashioned tradition.

Palo Alto is obviously not the same small town it once was.  Kids can no longer safely bike unsupervised all
over town, corporate chains now sit in nearly half the storefronts along University Avenue, and traffic snarls
along many of the city’s major streets.  Like the rest of the country, changes have come to Palo Alto ---
bringing both good and bad.  But unlike some strip mall cities on the Peninsula, you can still find some of the
old traditions in Palo Alto that makes this community special.  And if you ever doubt it, just take a look at a
child’s face when they first turn that corner and gaze at the lights down Christmas Tree Lane.

                                                                                                                           -Matt Bowling
Santa climbs the
chimney at the
house that started it
all at 1830 Fulton
The procession of cars often
backs up onto Embarcadero
during peak hours
Santa still climbs the
chimney at the new house at
1830 Fulton
Palo Alto Home Page
The Christmas smurfs
A well-lit house
Green Gables
The Fulton Street house at
1726 in the year 1980 (PAHA)
Cardboard carolers on the
Lane in 1983 (PAHA)
Landmarks
The map below shows the Green Gables area
Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of Christmas Tree Lane?  Post
them in our memory bank.  
Thanks!
Your name:
Email:
Subject:
The house at #1726 today
Palo Alto: Then & Now
2007

1983
At left is Christmas Tree Lane in 1983 in the early evening
with trees lit.  Fulton Street today is at right as shot around
4:50 PM a few days before Christmas.  The trees had just
been lit, but the heavy crowds --- typical of a Saturday
Night during the holiday season --- had not yet arrived.
Sources:
Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto
Historical Association
Links:
Christmastreelane.org
Memories added by our readers:
"My earliest memories of growing up in Palo Alto in the 1970's are of Christmas Tree
Lane.  Every Christmas eve after church, we would drive down the enchanted street,
and when we arrived at home, Santa had miraculously arrived.  To this day, I don't
truly feel that it is the Christmas season until I take a ceremonial drive down Christmas
Tree Lane.  It takes me back to my childhood to see the Smurfs, the nutcracker, the
elves, the train, and the manger scene.  Although some homes do not display
decorations quite as involved as I remember, it's a special holiday tradition.  And it's
not only a tradition for locals!  One good friend who grew up in Marin took an annual
trip down with her family to see Christmas Tree Lane!  I hope this tradition will last so
that I can share it with my children some day."
-Katie