In the late 1920s, the recently married Mr. and Mrs. L.T.
Burns celebrated their first Christmas together in their
modest home on Tenth Street in Wichita Falls by setting a
small Christmas tree on their front porch and decorating it
with a single, blue bulb. It was a small gesture, but an
extremely meaningful one for the young couple,
especially Mr. Burns, who grew up in a family unable to
afford such luxuries as Christmas trees.
As the years passed and Mr. Burns became more
successful in the oil industry, the couple continued the
tradition they began that first Christmas. Each year they
set up a display of some kind, and each year the display
became a little more elaborate than the year before.
In 1954, Mr. Burns was killed in an automobile accident,
but Mrs. Burns continued the display, dedicating it to her
husband’s memory. Each Christmas season from 1954
until 1970, the front lawn of the Burns’ home, then located
at Harrison and Clarinda, turned into a fantasyland of
animated displays and brightly colored lights. By then, the
display had become so large and so detailed that Mrs.
Burns annually had to hire craftsmen and mechanics to
repair and maintain the old scenes and design and build
new ones.
In May 1971 Mrs. Burns, who had brought joy to so many
people, died and the display was discontinued. In her will she
stipulated that her son could keep the display or leave it to the
care of Archer City, where many employees of the Burns estate
lived and worked. The display remained in storage for the next
three years.
Following the death of Mrs. Burns’ son in 1974, Archer City
offered the display to Midwestern State University on the
condition that the display be operated free of charge to the
public as a memorial to Mrs. Burns. Because MSU did not have
the funds necessary to operate and maintain such an enormous
project, a nonprofit Fantasy of Lights Committee was formed to
raise the thousands of dollars needed to buy paint, equipment,
and materials needed to restore the display and prepare for its
exhibition during the 1974 Christmas season. A volunteer force
of local townspeople, MSU students, faculty and staff, and
airmen from Sheppard Air Force Base, spent many long hours
repairing and restoring each scene.
On December 4, 1974, after a tremendous undertaking
involving hundreds of people, the master switch was thrown
and the MSU-Burns Fantasy of Lights became a reality.
Estimated number of visitors annually
Number of lights outlining MSU’s Hardin
Administration Building, Moffett Library, Bolin
Science Hall, Central Plant, and D.L. Ligon
Coliseum
Number of lighted, animated scenes
200,000
20,000
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