Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Search
78.3 F
Salt Lake City
Sunday, September 21, 2025
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contests
  • About The Globe
    • Staff
    • Jobs
    • Issue PDFs
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy Policy
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
The Globe The Globe
The Globe The Globe
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Home News Local Treat yourself to some Halloween history
  • News
  • Local

Treat yourself to some Halloween history

By
Trent Burden
-
October 29, 2016
0

Halloween has become a celebration of childhood and fun, but the holiday has strong roots in spirituality. Some of the first activities associated with Halloween date back nearly 2,000 years ago. Learn more about the early celebrations and how the holiday has evolved over time.

Halloween

The first Halloween celebrations can be traced back to the time of the Celtic festival, Samhain (pronounced SAH-win).

The Celts associated death with the colder weather and darker days of winter, and considered Nov. 1 to be the last day of summer, the last day of the harvest season and the beginning of a new year.

The Celts believed that the boundary between the living and the dead was blurred on Oct. 31, which allowed the souls of the dead to return and walk the earth. The living would leave food and wine on their front steps to keep the dead at ease. If celebrants wanted to leave their homes, they would wear masks, hoping to be mistaken as ghosts.

To celebrate Samhain, the Druids, or Celtic priests, would light bonfires and sacrifice animals and crops to the dead. While doing this most of the Celts would be wearing some kind of primeval mask or costume, typically made of animal heads and skins.

Trick-or-treating

Other Halloween traditions started in a more modern but still very medieval Britain, including a practice known as souling and guising.

On Nov. 2, or All Souls Day, the needy would beg for pastries called soul cakes, and in return they would pray for the deceased family of the generous donors. Guising involved dressing up in costume and accepting food, money or wine in return for the performance of songs, jokes or poetry.

However, these customs were not widely celebrated in America until the latter half of the 19th century, likely because Protestant beliefs kept most people from participating in what they considered a Pagan holiday. But times have changed.

Americans have made Halloween the second-most recognized and expensive holiday. According to a survey done by the National Retail Federation, 171 million Americans are expected to celebrate Halloween in 2016, spending a record $8.4 billion this year.

Trick or treat.

  • TAGS
  • Halloween
  • origin of Halloween
Trent Burden

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Panel 1: Student 1 looks weary while reading at desk; Panel 2: Door opens, student 2 exclaims "It's spooky time!" Student 1 startled; Panel 3: Student 1 turns and says "What?" Student 2 says "Spooky Time!" and runs; Panel 4: Student 1 glaring in direction of Student 2, who is now out of frame; Panel 5: Student 1 looks with surprise as Student 2 says "Spooky time!" while wearing costume and holding jack-o-lantern and Halloween decorations; Panel 6; Student 1 sighs and turns head sharply back toward book; Panel 7: Student 2 whispers "Spooky time" as they sneak up behind Student 1 and place a headband with ears on Student 1, who looks annoyed; Panel 8: Happy Halloween Everyone!

Comic: Spooky time at SLCC

Nightmare on 13th logo on the attraction's wall

This year’s Nightmare on 13th boasts two new ‘nightmares’

Haunted house worker wearing a scary pumpkin costume

Globe staffers check out Nightmare on 13th’s 2022 showing, which features a new attraction

Eyeball next to Nightmare on 13th sign

Nightmare on 13th celebrates 31 years with a spirited return

Orange and multicolored pumpkin decoration

Students find alternatives for Halloween celebrations

The Globe
ABOUT US
About The Globe
Staff
Jobs
Issue PDFs
FOLLOW US
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • About The Globe
  • Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
© 2025 The Globe