Originally, Jack-O-Lanterns were made from turnips.
Jack-O-Lanterns Were Originally Carved From Turnips
If you've ever tried carving a pumpkin, you know it's messy work. Now imagine doing it with a turnip. That's exactly what people in Ireland, Scotland, and other Celtic regions did for centuries before pumpkins entered the picture. These weren't cute decorations—original turnip Jack-O-Lanterns were genuinely unsettling, with grotesque faces meant to frighten away wandering spirits.
The tradition dates back to ancient Celtic celebrations of Samhain, the festival marking the end of harvest and the beginning of winter. This was considered a thin time between worlds, when supernatural beings could cross over into the realm of the living. To protect themselves from restless souls, people carved frightening faces into whatever root vegetables they had on hand—turnips, rutabagas, beets, potatoes, even mangelwurzels.
The Legend of Stingy Jack
The name "Jack-O-Lantern" comes from an Irish folktale about a clever drunkard named Stingy Jack. According to legend, Jack managed to trick the Devil multiple times, even getting Satan to promise he'd never take Jack's soul. Sounds like a win, right? Not exactly.
When Jack eventually died, he was too sinful for heaven but barred from hell due to his deal with the Devil. Stuck in limbo, Jack was condemned to wander the Earth for eternity. The Devil, showing a hint of mercy (or maybe just humor), tossed him a burning coal to light his way. Jack placed it inside a carved-out turnip, creating the first Jack-O-Lantern as he roamed the darkness forever.
Why the Switch to Pumpkins?
When Irish and Scottish immigrants arrived in North America during the 19th century, they brought their turnip-carving traditions with them. But they quickly discovered something better: pumpkins. Native to North America and much larger and softer than turnips, pumpkins were infinitely easier to carve. The tradition caught on fast, and the pumpkin Jack-O-Lantern became an American Halloween staple.
If you've never seen an original turnip Jack-O-Lantern, look one up—they're absolutely nightmarish. Those shriveled, wrinkled faces with hollow eyes make modern pumpkin carvings look downright cheerful. Perhaps that's fitting, considering their original purpose was to terrify evil spirits, not decorate suburban porches.
A Harvest Tradition With Bite
The timing of these carvings wasn't random. Root vegetables were plentiful after the autumn harvest, making them the perfect medium for Halloween decorations. People would:
- Hollow out the vegetable completely
- Carve menacing faces with whatever tools they had
- Place a candle or ember inside
- Display them in windows or carry them through the darkness
Today's Instagram-worthy pumpkin carvings—complete with intricate designs and pop culture references—are a far cry from those original Celtic creations. But next time you scoop out pumpkin guts, take a moment to appreciate that you're not wrestling with a rock-hard turnip. Your ancestors had it rough.