From the North American Aerospace Defense Command:
“NORAD Tracks Santa”
Every day of the year, NORAD
defends North America using an all-domain and globally integrated approach to
track everything that flies in and around Canada and the United States. On Dec.
24, NORAD adds a special mission: tracking Santa. Like many origin stories, NORAD’s mission to
track Santa began by accident. In 1955 a young child, trying to reach Santa,
dialed the misprinted phone number from a department store ad in the local
newspaper. Instead of calling Santa, the child called the Continental Air
Defense Command (CONAD) Operations Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. Air Force Col. Harry Shoup, the commander on
duty that night who answered the child’s phone call, was quick to realize a
mistake had been made and assured the child he was Santa. After more incoming
calls, Shoup assigned a duty officer to continue answering calls and a
tradition was born, that continued when NORAD was formed in 1958.
Each year since, NORAD has
dutifully reported Santa’s location on Dec. 24 to millions of children and
families across the world. Because of the support, services and resources
generously provided by volunteers and our government and corporate
contributors, NORAD Tracks Santa has persevered for more than 65 years. In fact, what started because of a typo has
flourished and is recognized as one of the Department of Defense's largest
community outreach programs. Each year,
the NORAD Tracks Santa Web Site receives several million unique visitors from
more than 200 countries and territories around the world. Volunteers typically
answer more than 130,000 calls to the NORAD Tracks Santa hotline from children
across the globe.
In addition to the phone line and
website, children and the young-at-heart can track Santa through our mobile
apps and our social media platforms:
Facebook:
Twitter:
YouTube:
Instagram:
NORAD Tracks Santa Website:
NORAD Tracks Santa Newsroom:
https://noradsantanews.com/newsroom
Several contributors such as OnStar and Amazon Alexa also provide convenient ways to keep tabs of Santa’s location.
^ NORAD Tracks Santa has so many
avenues (websites, television, radio, telephone, etc.) to help children around
the world know just where Santa Claus is at any moment on December 24th. It is
not just for Canadian or American children. Their website is in: English,
French, Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, German, Italian and Spanish. ^
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