In Jimmy Carter’s Plains, Georgia, Christmas tree tradition lives on

President Jimmy Carter wishes everybody a Merry Christmas as he leaves the home of his mother-in-law in Plains, Georgia on Dec. 25, 1978. From left: Rosalynn Carter, Amy Carter, Mrs. Allie Smith, his mother-in-law, wearing glasses, and president. Others in the background are unidentified family members and friends. (AP Photo/Charles Tasnadi)
President Jimmy Carter wishes everybody a Merry Christmas as he leaves the home of his mother-in-law in Plains, Georgia on Dec. 25, 1978. From left: Rosalynn Carter, Amy Carter, Mrs. Allie Smith, his mother-in-law, wearing glasses, and president. Others in the background are unidentified family members and friends. (AP Photo/Charles Tasnadi)

PLAINS, Ga. -- Early Tuesday morning, Ron Hobkirk, Brennan Morris and Henry Smith ventured out of the woods behind the old Jimmy Carter Boyhood Home carrying what would soon be a Christmas tree.

It wasn't perfect. Few are.

So they drilled holes in it and stuck branches from other trees in it to fill it out. It was part of a tradition that dates back nearly a century.

"Throughout the year, Daddy and I were on the lookout in our woods for a relatively rare wild red cedar that would make a good Christmas tree, one that was perfect in size and shape," Carter wrote in his 2001 memoir, "Christmas in Plains." "My father was meticulous about its quality, and if there were unsightly gaps anywhere in the foliage, we would drill a small hole into the tree trunk and insert an extra limb or two."

"They wanted the tree to be perfect so they looked all year long for that perfect cedar tree," said Jill Stuckey, the superintendent of the Jimmy Carter National Historical Park. "If it was not perfect, they would make it perfect."

The tiny city of Plains, with all of its 736 residents, including a former president and first lady, is bustling this week ahead of Christmas.

President Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, are nestled warmly in the same Plains home they have lived in since 1961. They are not expected to go out, but family members will be coming here this weekend to celebrate the holidays with them.

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"Christmas is the time the community comes together to celebrate, and President Carter and Mrs. Carter are always a big part of that tradition here in Plains," said Kevin Alexander, who has worked as a park ranger for 18 years and works as a blacksmith at the boyhood farm.

  photo  President Jimmy Carter waves to spectators during Christmas morning visit by the President and his family to the home of his mother, Mrs. Lillian Carter, in Plains, Georgia Sunday, Dec. 25, 1977. Rosalynn Carter, the Presidents wife, is at right, with daughter Amy carrying packages in foreground. Others in picture are, from left; Chip Carter, the Presidents son; Chuck Smith, a nephew, in checked shirt; Mrs. Allie Smith, Mrs. Carters mother; Caron Carter, partially obscured behind the President, wife of Chip Carter, holding their son, James E. Carter IV. Man in left background is Murray Smith, Mrs. Carters brother. (AP Photo/DC)
 
 

The Jimmy Carter National Historical Park will mark its 35th anniversary on Friday. Stuckey, who has been running it for more than three years, said she and the park field dozens of calls and texts daily about the Carters.

"I don't mind," said Stuckey, who visits the Carters daily. "It means they are not forgotten."

At noon Tuesday the heart of what is Plains' downtown was busy. Stuckey walked into The Buffalo Café for lunch and ordered a BLT with peanut butter. Her guest ordered a patty melt, which the cashier said was President Carter's favorite. A man sitting nearby, wearing a camouflage hunting hat, put his fingers together in an OK sign to silently confirm how good the patty melt is.

After Stuckey sat down, her waitress came over to tell her that they were out of peanut butter, a fact that left Stuckey's guest flabbergasted -- in Plains.

A few doors down at Bobby Salter's Plain Peanuts and General Store, the shop's namesake was in the back holding court. Salter had a group of young men and a 92-year-old woman laughing at his stories. Each had a cone of peanut butter ice cream in their hand.

"This is about the only place you can get peanut butter ice cream that is as good as this," Salter said.

The space where Salter's store is was originally purchased in 1942 by Carter's father, James Earl Carter, to use as a warehouse.

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Starting in 1975, Salter ran a little shop out of a service station belonging to the former president's brother, Billy. In 1989, Salter purchased the old Carter warehouse from the former president's sister, Gloria.

"I seen the good times and the bad times. The good times were right after President Carter was elected. The bad time was right after he got whupped and come on home," Salter said. "Now, business is good."

  photo  President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, carry their luggage to their home in Plains, Georgia Wednesday, Dec. 22, 1977 as they arrived to start their Christmas vacation at home. (AP Photo/DC)
 
 

Locals and tourists are in and out of the store to pick up one of three delicacies -- peanut brittle, fried peanuts, and of course, peanut butter ice cream.

All are secured under a secret recipe.

"A lot of people say they don't like peanut butter, but they taste this ice cream and go crazy about it," Salter said. "I started working on a recipe for a little over a year to get it where we are now. When we got to where we are now, I said we might as well quit. Paula Deen tried to get the recipe in one of her books, and I wouldn't give it to her."

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After her BLT and skipping the peanut butter ice cream because she said it was too cold outside, Stuckey drove down to the Boyhood Home to see the Christmas tree.

There is no electricity in the boyhood home, so it was chilly.

The tree was in the corner of the family room. Like when Carter was a child, it featured a perfect five-pointed star covered in tin foil and, as in his memoir, "long chains of circled and glued paper strips of different colors to be draped over the tree limbs."

Underneath the tree was an old red wagon stuffed with simple toys, reflective of the kind of gifts that Carter would have gotten or given as a child.

"The Christmas tree was a big deal for him. And this was a simpler time. When you worked personally on the tree and every present," Stuckey said. "We love educating people about how President Carter grew up. From fixing a Christmas tree when he was a boy to leading the free world."

Perfect.

This story first appeared in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

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