Secret Santa now has a name and a history
$1.3 million later, Secret Santa is finally revealed
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – For 26 years, a man known only as Secret Santa has
roamed the streets every December quietly giving people money.
He started with $5 and $10 bills. As his fortune grew, so did the
gifts. In recent years, Secret Santa has been handing out $100 bills,
sometimes two or three at a time, to people in thrift stores, diners
and parking lots.
So far, he's anonymously given away about $1.3 million. It's been
a long-held holiday mystery: Who is Secret Santa?
But now, weak from chemotherapy and armed with a desire to pass on
his belief in random kindness, Secret Santa has decided it's time to
reveal his identity.
He is Larry Stewart, a 58-year-old businessman from the Kansas City
suburb of Lee's Summit, who made his millions in cable television and
long-distance telephone service.
His holiday giving started in December 1979 when he was nursing his
wounds at a drive-in restaurant after getting fired. It was the second
year in a row he had been fired the week before Christmas.
“It was cold and this car hop didn't have on a very big jacket, and
I thought to myself, 'I think I got it bad. She's out there in this cold
making nickels and dimes,'” he said.
He gave her $20 and told her to keep the change.
“And suddenly I saw her lips begin to tremble and tears begin to flow
down her cheeks. She said, 'Sir, you have no idea what this means to me.' ”
Stewart went to the bank that day and took out $200, then drove around
looking for people who could use a lift. That was his “Christmas present
to himself.” He's hit the streets each December since.
While Stewart has also given money to other community causes in Kansas
City and his hometown of Bruce, Miss., he offers the simple gifts of cash
because it's something people don't have to “beg for, get in line for,
or apply for.”
That was a feeling he came to know in the early 1970s when he was living
out of his yellow Datsun 510. Hungry and tired, Stewart mustered the nerve
to approach a woman at a church and ask for help.
The woman told him the person who could help was gone for the day, and
Stewart would have to come back the next day.
“As I turned around, I knew I would never do that again,” Stewart said.
Over the years, Stewart's giving as Secret Santa grew. He started a Web
site. He allowed the news media to tag along, mostly because he wanted to
hear about the people who received the money. Reporters had to agree to
guard his identity and not name his company, which he still does not
want revealed.
His entourage grew over the years, and he began traveling with special
elves. People like the late Negro Leagues icon Buck O'Neil, who handed
out hugs while Stewart doled out $100s. NFL Hall of Famer Dick Butkus
will join Stewart this year in Chicago when Stewart hands out $100s in
honor of O'Neil.
They'll give out $100,000 between Chicago and Kansas City. Four Secret
Santa's who Stewart “trained” will hand out an additional $65,000.
Doctors told Stewart in April that he had cancer of the esophagus and
it had spread to his liver. He has been lucky, he says, to get into a
clinical trial at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. But the aggressive
chemotherapy has stripped away his appetite and energy. He's lost about
100 pounds, but has held onto his white hair.
Now, his mission is bigger than handing out $100 bills. Stewart wants
to speak to community groups about his devotion to kindness and to inspire
others to donate their time and money.
“That's what we're here for,” Stewart says, “to help other people out.”