Bell County Museum teaches children about Christmas traditions around the world
December 18, 2025
By Michele Weisman
The Belton Journal
Kayte Ricketts, education coordinator for the Bell County Museum, organized a free children’s event called Holiday Fest.
It was held upstairs on Saturday, Dec. 13, from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Children, through crafts, experienced how winter holidays and Christmas are celebrated around the world.
Families brought their children to create crafts and a holiday memory. Five activities were prepared for the kids to rotate through. At each table, there was an adult to guide the craft and a printed definition of who celebrates the occasion and why.
The first table was reindeer chow, a snack for reindeer. Oats and rainbow frosting sprinkles were mixed in small paper sacks. They were food and magic for Santa’s reindeer.
The second table was for the Epiphany, celebrated on Jan. 6 in Hispanic cultures, the Philippines, and Spain. Teaching that the three wise men brought gifts to Jesus when he was a baby, they made the Three Kings’ crowns. Full paper size cut out crowns, Crayola pens, glue, and plastic gems were used to decorate them.
Next, the St. Nicholas Day table was prepared with photocopies of shoes to decorate, fold, and fill with candy. Germany, Poland, and the Netherlands celebrate this bishop on Dec. 6, because he placed gifts in people’s shoes.
The final craft was making a Christmas ornament to celebrate the birth of Christ. The children had a felt star, wreath, or snowflake to decorate with craft pompoms.
To complete the global adventure, jingle bells and play dough were available to build the tallest jingle structure possible, called the jingle bell maker challenge.
“I like my annual Holiday Fest,” Rickets said of teaching different cultures to the children who come to the museum.
Go to www.bellcountymuseum.org for more museum events.By Michele Weisman The Belton Journal








