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Norad Santa Tracker 2013: Follow Father Christmas as he rockets around the globe delivering presents

You'll be able to track Father Christmas thanks to Norad

Rob Williams
Tuesday 24 December 2013 11:50 GMT
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Twas the night before Christmas, when all thro' the house...people were glued to their computers and clicking their mouse...

Yes, it's the most wonderful time of the year.

And thanks to Norad (North American Aerospace Defense Command) you'll be able to track Father Christmas as he rockets around the globe delivering presents to the eager children of the world.

Every year since 1955 the airforces whose usual responsibility involves defending US airspace devote some of their time to tracking the progress of a fat white-bearded gentleman as he darts around the globe on a sleigh pulled by reindeer.

The Santa Tracker programme began when on December 24 1955 a Sears department store placed an advert in a a Colorado Springs newspaper which invited young readers to contact Santa.

Unfortunately the newspaper printed the wrong number, directing people instead to the number for Colorado Springs' Continental Air Defense Command (Conad) Centre.

The colonel who was on duty that night - Harry Shoup - instructed his staff to give all the children who called a "current location" for Santa Claus, and hence the tradition began.

It continued when Norad replaced Conad in 1958.

Such is the demand for information on Santa's progress that Norad today employs volunteers to man the phones. It is estimated that they handle around 12,000 e-mails and more than 70,000 telephone calls from more than two hundred countries.

The Santa Tracker has become more advanced over the years and has taken to social media with accounts on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

Although Norad have a significant task ahead of them tracking Santa it is nothing as compared to the challenge the man in red and white himself faces.

Santa has to deliver to presents to an estimated 1.6 billion children on Christmas Eve.

A task that requires him to visit 822 homes a second and travel at 650 miles a second - which is 3,000 times the speed of sound.

Click here to visit the Norad Santa Tracker

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