Long before Mickey Mouse and Disneyland, a thirteen-year-old Walt Disney had simpler dreams: a fashionable pair of high leather boots with metal toes and decorative strips over the laces. It was 1914, and every kid at school seemed to own a pair.
What Walt couldn’t have known was that this Christmas gift would become a turning point that would shape his entire future – though not in the way anyone expected.
In the Vault of Walt Christmas Edition, author Jim Korkis – one of the most respected chroniclers of Disney history – curates a festive collection of essays exploring how Christmas traditions have woven themselves into the fabric of Disney storytelling, parks, films, and corporate legacy.
The book is structured as a series of standalone chapters, each spotlighting a specific piece of Disney Christmas lore. Topics include:
- Walt Disney’s personal Christmas traditions, including anecdotes about the Disney family’s holiday rituals at home and in the studio.
- Behind-the-scenes stories of classic Disney Christmas productions, such as Mickey’s Christmas Carol, Babes in Toyland, and various holiday television specials.
- The evolution of Disneyland and Walt Disney World holiday celebrations, from early parades and decor to today’s highly orchestrated seasonal events.
- Obscure and rarely told stories, such as abandoned concepts for Christmas attractions, little-known character appearances, and holiday tie-ins with Disney marketing and merchandising.
True to the Vault of Walt series, the book presents a mixture of deep archival digging, oral histories, and Korkis’s signature informal, conversational storytelling.
As an example, here’s a little-known story from Walt’s childhood that literally changed his destiny…
A Newsboy’s Hard Life
Young Walt’s childhood in Kansas City was far from magical. Working as a newsboy on a route owned by his father Elias, Walt experienced hardships that would stay with him forever. His days began at 3:00 in the morning, when most children were still sleeping soundly. By 3:30 a.m., he’d already be out in the brutal Kansas City winters, trudging through snow and slush to deliver newspapers. He’d barely make it back in time for school, exhausted before his day had truly begun.
When Walt spotted those stylish boots, he saw more than just a fashion statement. He tried to convince his father they were practical – they’d give him better traction in the slush and rain, helping him deliver papers more quickly. But Elias Disney wasn’t buying the argument. Money was desperately tight, and such extravagances were out of the question.
Walt persisted, hoping the boots might appear for his birthday on December 5th. Instead, he received something practical and forgettable. With his birthday falling so close to Christmas, Walt often had to settle for one gift to cover both occasions.
A Mother’s Secret Sacrifice
What Walt didn’t know was that his mother Flora had been quietly setting aside pennies from the housekeeping budget, hiding her savings from her husband. Walt’s older brother Roy had found extra work and contributed his earnings to the cause. Together, they made the impossible possible.
On Christmas morning, there beneath the tree sat a wrapped package. When Walt tore it open, his face lit up with pure joy. The boots were finally his.
Pride Before the Fall
Unable to contain his excitement, Walt immediately put on his prized boots and ran downtown. He positioned himself against a drugstore at the intersection of Thirty-First and Indiana, hoping his school friends might pass by and see his new footwear. It was an unusually warm winter, and the ice had begun to melt.
As darkness fell around six o’clock, Walt started walking home. The streets were filled with chunks of ice – remnants of winter that melted first on the roadway. With his new boots, Walt invented a game to pass the time: kicking the hunks of ice across the street, experimenting with different angles and force.
Then came the kick that changed everything.
Trapped in the Twilight
Walt approached what seemed like just another chunk of ice. But when his boot made contact, he couldn’t pull his foot back. Panic set in as he realized the horrible truth: a large horseshoe nail frozen in that block of ice had pierced straight through his new boot and into his foot. He was stuck to the ice, unable to move.
The street was empty. Everyone was home celebrating with family. Walt yanked and pulled, but without leverage, escape was impossible. He began shouting for help, frantically waving at passing streetcars. People looked at him and continued on their way, assuming he was just a kid playing around.
For more than twenty minutes, Walt remained trapped on that darkening street, fear mounting with each passing moment. Finally, a horse-drawn delivery wagon approached. The driver initially didn’t believe the boy’s cries for help and started to move on – until Walt broke into tears.
The driver got down and assessed the situation. He had to fetch a tool to chop the ice loose, then carried the small, frail boy to a nearby doctor’s office. Without any anesthetic to ease the pain, Walt had to endure the doctor cutting off his boot and using metal pliers to dig out the nail while two men held him down. After cleaning the wound came the dreaded tetanus shot.
Adding insult to injury, Walt’s father had to be called to pick him up and pay the medical bill.
Two Weeks That Shaped a Legacy
Walt spent two weeks laid up on the living room couch with his foot elevated, consumed by guilt and shame. The boots his mother and brother had sacrificed for were destroyed. The family could never afford another pair. Nightmares of being trapped alone on that cold, darkening street haunted his sleep.
With no school, radio, or other entertainment, Walt had only books and a sketch pad given by his aunt. He had once considered becoming a doctor or lawyer, but his exhausting work schedule left him catching catnaps in class and missing important lessons. He lacked the grades for a good college, and his family couldn’t afford tuition anyway.
During those two weeks of convalescence, something crystallized in Walt’s mind. He realized he loved cartooning. His drawings earned chuckles at the local barbershop, where the barber would accept cartoons as payment and display them in the window. His classmates loved his work. Each day, when his mother delivered his homework assignments, she’d drop off his cartoons and return with reports of enthusiastic reactions.
By the time his foot healed, Walt Disney had made a firm decision: he would become a professional cartoonist.
The Gift That Kept Giving
Reluctantly, Elias allowed Walt to take Saturday morning art lessons at the Kansas City Art Institute. When the family moved to Chicago, Walt pursued classes at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, studying three nights a week after school. As his daughter Diane later recalled, Walt loved being at a drawing board so much that he’d hold off going to the bathroom until class ended.
Almost three years after that fateful Christmas, Walt returned from serving with the Red Cross Ambulance Corps in France, ready to pursue his cartooning dreams.
Those Christmas boots – longed for, briefly cherished, and tragically destroyed – became the unexpected gift that gave the world Walt Disney. Sometimes the most transformative presents aren’t the ones we keep, but the ones that force us to discover who we’re truly meant to become.
A Gift for Fans of Disney Lore
The Vault of Walt Christmas Edition stands out as one of the more personal and intimate volumes in Korkis’s long-running series. Christmas already carries emotional weight for many readers, and Korkis skillfully blends that sentimentality with his extraordinary knowledge of Disney history.
- Rich, Primary-Source Material: Korkis’s strength has always been his access – to artists, Imagineers, animators, and studio staff – and he uses it here to paint a vivid picture of how Walt Disney approached the holidays both personally and professionally. Chapters about Walt’s own family are particularly compelling and help humanize a figure many only know in mythic form.
- Deep Cuts for Enthusiasts: Hard-to-find stories are where this book shines. Fans who think they “know everything” about Disney Christmas will discover, including: abandoned scripts, forgotten televised specials, rare park entertainment initiatives, and internal studio celebrations from the 1940s–1960s. These chapters reflect the best of Disney historiography: carefully researched, yet told with warmth.
- Accessible for Casual Readers: While Disney historians will appreciate the depth, the writing style makes the book approachable for anyone. The standalone essay format means readers can dip in and out like opening doors on an Advent calendar – each chapter its own small surprise.
- Tone and Style: Korkis’s voice is friendly, nostalgic, and occasionally humorous. He avoids academic dryness without sacrificing accuracy – a tricky balance he manages well.
As with all Vault of Walt books, the essay structure can feel slightly episodic; readers looking for a single cohesive narrative may prefer other histories. But this format is also part of the series’ charm.
A warm, meticulously researched, and heartfelt exploration of Disney’s holiday heritage.
For anyone fascinated by Disney parks, animation history, or Walt Disney himself, The Vault of Walt Christmas Edition is a delightful seasonal read packed with stories that rarely appear in official company publications. It captures the magic of both Christmas and Disney in equal measure – an ideal addition to any Disney historian’s bookshelf.
Part of a regular series on 27gen, entitled Wednesday Weekly Reader.
During my elementary school years one of the things I looked forward to the most was the delivery of “My Weekly Reader,” a weekly educational magazine designed for children and containing news-based current events.
It became a regular part of my love for reading, and helped develop my curiosity about the world around us.



