| The
History & Legends of the Jack O' Lantern by Cheri
Sicard Carving
Jack O' Lanterns is a Halloween custom that dates back to ancient Ireland, although
the first Jack O' Lanterns were made of turnips, beets or even hollowed out potatoes,
not pumpkins. The large orange squashes didn't come into prominence until Irish
immigrants settled in the United States, where pumpkins were cheaper and more
plentiful than turnips. Several version of an Irish legend tells of a man
named Stingy Jack, who invited the Devil to have a drink. When it came time to
pay, he convinced the Devil to change into a sixpence, but instead of paying for
the drink Jack pocketed the sixpence and kept it stored beside a silver cross,
which prevented the Devil from changing back. Jack made a deal with the Devil
before letting him free that the Devil could not harass him. Next Halloween Jack
died and was turned back from the Gates of Heaven. He went to the Gates of Hell
and the Devil told him to go away, as Jack had made him promise not to claim his
soul. Jack didn't want to leave because it was dark and he couldn't find his way.
The Devil tossed Jack a glowing coal and Jack put it inside a turnip, and ever
since with this "Jack O' Lantern", Stingy Jack's lonely soul has been roaming
the faces of this earth. Another version has Jack tricking Beezelbub into
climbing a tree, where upon Jack then carved an image of a cross in the tree's
trunk, trapping the devil in his high perch. Jack made a deal with the satan that,
if he would never tempt him again, he would promise to let Lucifer down from the
tree. According to the folk tale, after Jack died, he was denied entrance to Heaven
because of his evil ways, but he was also denied access to Hell because he had
tricked the devil. The rest of the legend remains the same.
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