Winterlight — A Photo Essay of Christmas at Joseph Smith’s
Birthplace
By Scot Facer Proctor
SHARON, Vermont, December 22, 2005 — As our plane was nearing the airport this morning in Burlington,
Vermont, we looked out the window to see the vast, frozen
Lake Champlain and the frozen Winoski River feeding into it. The forests of Vermont looked
barren and dead. The scenes from the air, for a photographer,
were rather bleak and, well, rather black and white. The
temperature was 11 degrees Fahrenheit. Some were calling
it “shorts and t-shirt-weather.” The temperature has been
below zero here for quite some time. We grabbed a bite at
a local diner before heading the 87 miles to Sharon, Windsor
County, Vermont. By the time we finished our breakfast the
weather had changed from patches of blue to complete overcast
gray. After all, it is the winter solstice — the longest
night of the year will be tonight.
What
an appropriate day to preface the birth of the Prophet Joseph
— the longest night of the year, just before “the light begins
to return to the earth.” We love that symbolism in the Prophet
Joseph’s birth. We are here to celebrate the Bicentennial
of the Prophet’s birth with the entire Church.
I
found great joy in shooting a few pictures of the Christmas
lights around the Joseph Smith Birthplace Memorial tonight.
I always wanted to come here at the winter solstice, but never
really dreamed I would because of Christmas and family. This
year, we just couldn’t miss this event — and we fly back on
Christmas Eve — just in time for practicing our family traditions
and gathering. Walk with me, if you will, through a little
over a dozen scenes of “winterlight”
at the birthplace of the Prophet Joseph Smith.
click
on photos to enlarge

The east visitors’ center will be the place for the
broadcast of President Gordon B. Hinckley with Elder M. Russell
Ballard.

Looking through the posts of the visitors’ center, wrapped
in lights, one can see the humble little place on the rise
just beyond us where the cabin once stood where the Prophet
Joseph was born.

The cabin where the Prophet Joseph was born is
no longer here, but the feelings linger yet.

The front porch step (the stoop) that went to the
small, 22 x 24-foot, humble, rented cabin is still in place.
I like to touch things of historical value. I always touch
this stone when I come here.

The addition of lights to the Joseph Smith Birthplace
Memorial attracts as many as a thousand visitors in a night
here in this obscure place in Vermont.

The polished granite shaft from the Barre,
Vermont quarry stands 38 ˝ feet tall, one foot for each year
of the Prophet Joseph’s life.

The stone walkways are covered with wood in the winter
for easier access to the monument and the Joseph Smith birthplace
cabin site.

A full-size nativity is set at the base of the walkway
to the Joseph Smith monument.

Different angles reveal different views around the
monument.

Snow is light here this year, but cold weather is
plentiful. The lights around the monument warm the soul.

Thousands of lights light up this obscure location
in Sharon Township, Windsor County, Vermont on this winter
solstice.

As the night darkens, the lights between the two visitors’
centers become warmer and warmer.

Full night scene of the nativity and the Joseph Smith
Memorial is captured in this shot. What a blessing to be
here this night.

As
we leave our circle around the Joseph Smith Monument we get to drive under a canopy (or
covered bridge) of Christmas lights. This seems to be a favorite
of many, many visitors to this sacred site.
Watch
for a full report on the Bicentennial Celebration of the Prophet
Joseph’s Birth on Christmas Eve morning.