The winter holidays are the poinsettia’s time to shine. Today, National Poinsettia Day marks the anniversary of the death of Joel Roberts Poinsett, the physician and botanist who first introduced the colorful plant to the United States in 1828. He discovered the plant while he was serving as the first US ambassador to Mexico, the plant’s native country, where Aztecs once used it to produce red dye. According to legend, the poinsettia’s association with Christmas began in 16th-century Mexico, where a little girl—too poor to buy a gift—gathered weeds from the roadside and placed them in front of a church altar. They eventually produced lovely red leaves alongside the green ones, and the poinsettia plant was on its way to becoming a Christmas tradition.
The story of the poinsettia
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Golling Waterfall, Salzburg, Austria
-
In search of a ‘great’ pumpkin
-
Vernazza, Cinque Terre, Liguria, Italy
-
Heri es-Swani in Meknes, Morocco
-
At the shore of an inland sea
-
A duckling swimming in a water meadow, Suffolk, England
-
Crown Fountain by Jume Plensa at Millennium Park in Chicago
-
Tafilalet oasis in Morocco
-
Wander the ancient medina
-
Canada Day
-
Village of Zahara de la Sierra, Cadiz, Spain
-
Sunbeams across Tartu County, Estonia
-
Sydney Harbour, New South Wales, Australia
-
Perfect timing
-
World of WearableArt Awards
-
Time for brass bands and beer
-
World Rainforest Day
-
American Wetlands Month
-
A house of grand scale(s)
-
Making it work—in Norway
-
Wild lupines
-
Busy building wetlands
-
Floating temples in the Land of Smiles
-
Travel Sunday: Flamenco in Granada, Andalusia, Spain
-
Why does this panda cub look so happy?
-
Winter in the Wild West
-
An island oasis in the Indian Ocean
-
Star Wars Day
-
Land ho in New Zealand 250 years ago
-
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

