The story behind the Christmas carol song "SILENT NIGHT"
In 1818, a roving
band of actors was performing in towns throughout the Austrian Alps. On
December 23 they arrived at Oberndorf, a village near Salzburg where they were
to re-enact the story of Christ's birth in the small Church of St. Nicholas.
Unfortunately, the St. Nicholas' church organ wasn't working
and would not be repaired before Christmas. (Note: some versions of the story
point to mice as the problem; others say rust was the culprit) Because the
church organ was out of commission, the actors presented their Christmas drama
in a private home. That Christmas presentation of the events in the first
chapters of Matthew and Luke put assistant pastor Josef Mohr in a meditative
mood. Instead of walking straight to his house that night, Mohr took a longer
way home. The longer path took him up over a hill overlooking the village.
From that hilltop, Mohr looked down on the peaceful
snow-covered village. Reveling in majestic silence of the wintry night, Mohr
gazed down at the glowing Christmas-card like scene. His thoughts about the
Christmas play he had just seen made him remember a poem he had written a
couple of years before. That poem was about the night when angels announced the
birth of the long-awaited Messiah to shepherds on a hillside.
Mohr decided those words might make a good carol for his
congregation the following evening at their Christmas eve service. The one
problem was that he didn't have any music to which that poem could be sung. So,
the next day Mohr went to see the church organist, Franz Xaver Gruber. Gruber
only had a few hours to come up with a melody which could be sung with a
guitar. However, by that evening, Gruber had managed to compose a musical
setting for the poem. It no longer mattered to Mohr and Gruber that their
church organ was inoperable. They now had a Christmas carol that could be sung
without that organ.
On Christmas Eve, the little Oberndorf congregation heard
Gruber and Mohr sing their new composition to the accompaniment of Gruber's
guitar.
Weeks later, well-known organ builder Karl Mauracher arrived
in Oberndorf to fix the organ in St. Nicholas church. When Mauracher finished,
he stepped back to let Gruber test the instrument. When Gruber sat down, his
fingers began playing the simple melody he had written for Mohr's Christmas
poem. Deeply impressed, Mauracher took copies of the music and words of
"Silent Night" back to his own Alpine village, Kapfing. There, two
well-known families of singers — the Rainers and the Strassers — heard it. Captivated
by "Silent Night," both groups put the new song into their Christmas
season repertoire.
Silent night! holy
night!
All is calm, all is
bright,
'Round yon virgin
mother and Child!
Holy Infant, so
tender and mild,
Sleep in heavenly
peace,
Sleep in heavenly
peace.
The Strasser sisters
spread the carol across northern Europe. In 1834, they performed "Silent
Night" for King Frederick William IV of Prussia, and he then ordered his
cathedral choir to sing it every Christmas eve.
Twenty years after "Silent Night" was written, the
Rainers brought the song to the United States, singing it (in German) at the
Alexander Hamilton Monument located outside New York City's Trinity Church.
In 1863, nearly fifty years after being first sung in
German, "Silent Night" was translated into English (by either Jane
Campbell or John Young). Eight years later, that English version made its way
into print in Charles Hutchins' Sunday School Hymnal. Today the words of
"Silent Night" are sung in more than 300 different languages around
the world.

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