A Special Arizona Roundup Christmas Story from Sharlot Hall Museum
In this special Christmas edition of Arizona Roundup, host Stuart Rosebrook shares a deeply personal and quietly powerful holiday story—one that blends family history, Arizona heritage, and the enduring meaning of belonging.
The story centers on Stuart's father, Jeb Rosebrook, and a Christmas spent far from home in December 1945, just months after the end of World War II. As a young boy suffering from severe asthma, Jeb had been sent west from the East Coast to the Quarter Circle V-Bar Ranch School in central Arizona, where the dry air and demanding ranch life restored his health—and shaped his character.
That Christmas, with trains filled by returning soldiers and no passage available east, ten-year-old Jeb remained behind while other students went home. What might have been a lonely holiday instead became a defining moment. Ranch founder Charles "Uncle Chick" Orm invited the boy to accompany him into the snowy Bradshaw Mountains to cut a Christmas tree—a simple journey that became an act of quiet grace.
Through Stuart Rosebrook's telling—and through Jeb's own words—the listener is drawn into the cold air, the crunch of snow, the echo of an axe in the pines, and the warmth of a Christmas morning where family was chosen as much as inherited. That single tree, carried back on an open truck through winter wind, became a symbol of welcome, care, and belonging.
This brief story stands beautifully on its own, yet it also invites listeners to experience the full Christmas program from Sharlot Hall Museum in Prescott, Arizona, where history is preserved not just through artifacts, but through lived human stories—stories of resilience, kindness, and unexpected gifts.
As part of today's special Arizona Roundup Christmas broadcast, this story is joined by other seasonal reflections and features that celebrate Arizona's past and the enduring spirit of community.
It is a reminder that sometimes the greatest Christmas gifts are not found under a tree—but beside it.
Merry Christmas from Arizona Roundup and Sharlot Hall Museum. May the season bring you warmth, memory, and moments that matter.