Showing posts with label #Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Halloween. Show all posts

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Halloween by Mona Risk

My grandchildren claim they had the best Halloween. Not only did they decorate the house, but they also invited their friends to two Halloween parties.


During the first party, two weeks ago, the older kids and their friends decorated and baked Halloween pizza, Halloween cupcakes and Halloween cookies for their own dinner. Later they participated in a pumpkin decoration contest judged by the younger  kids.


A week later, the younger children invited their friends to a costume party and the older kids played judges and awarded prizes.

But that was just the beginning of the Halloween celebration.
A Trunk-and-Treat picnic gathered all the school children for a special costume party in the school yard. Parents and puppies were invited too. Our three-month-old Cockapoo attended in a Bat-dog costume.

And finally, on October 31st, following the tradition, all the kids of the neighborhood walked together and knocked on doors while their fathers trailed at a short distance behind them.

So much Halloweening resulted in an incredible amount of candies.
"I have a special basket for you Grandma," my sweet little granddaughter announced. And immediately added, "but don't touch the big pink bag. It's mine."


Now we will eat our candies and get ready for Thanksgiving and Christmas. And pray to fit in our Christmas outfits.

So how was your Halloween?


Holiday Babies Series

 With high moral values and a strong sense of unity, the Ramsay family counts five daughters—Madelyn, Roxanne, Heather, Claire, Tiffany, and their mother Barbara. Later, stepdaughter Monica Roland joins the clan.

 Holly JollyChristmas: Prequel to the series . Mr. Ramsay is still with his family and Heather is pregnant at eighteen. (Heather’s story)
Christmas Babies: She dedicated her life to her medical career. Now she realizes she has no life. (Madelyn’s story)
Valentine Babies: Can he love a woman expecting another man's baby? (Roxanne’s story)
Mother's Day Babies: Never too late to find love and happiness. (Barbara’s story)
Wedding Surprise: Is it the worst or best wedding surprise? (Claire’s story)
Christmas Papa: Who's my Papa, Mommy? (Monica’s story)
On Christmas Eve: We want a mommy for Christmas. (Tiffany’s story)

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

19th C. HALLOWEEN Party -- by Kristin Holt




by USA Today Bestselling Author Kristin Holt




Happy Halloween! If you're a lifelong resident of the United States, you've probably already bought candy for trick-or-treaters. Did you know Americans are anticipated to spend $3.8 billion on candy. BTW: Trick-or-Treating, and candy, are a 20th century development.

But Halloween's been around for ages.

Halloween--All Hallows Eve, All Saints Day, Hallowe'en, the witching eve--has been acknowledged and celebrated for centuries. Like most things, traditions followed immigrants from Europe, where paganism melded with Christianity. That's Old World history... I'm mostly concerned about the Victorians. All of my titles, thus far, are American Historical Romances.

Victorian America Celebrates Halloween

Nineteenth-century Americans had a good time with Halloween. Vintage sources (newspapers and books) show that "boys will be boys" (in quotation marks because the term was new to American English)--and they loved their pranks!

Muskogee Phoenix of Muskogee, Oklahoma / Indian Territory on November 3, 1892.
The Summit County Beacon of Akron, Ohio on November 7, 1887.
A wagon and a sleigh... on a rooftop?
Halloween was a great excuse to prank anyone and everyone:


"It is the season, when, under the cover of darkness, tricks are played on unsuspecting humanity, some of these tricks being of such an extremely practical nature as to cease to be a joke." ~ Pittsburgh Daily Commercial of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on October 31, 1873.


Victorian Americans also celebrated the holiday with parties. Nineteenth-century Americans looked for any excuse to break the monotony of long winters and social isolation (especially on the frontier) with as many social events as possible. After all, how else would a bachelor find a suitable lady to court?





Parties were held in young ladies' homes, where they invited their female friends ("a dove party")... but the boys did everything they could to crash the party.

Springfield Daily Republic of Springfield, Ohio on November 5, 1887.


Some social events were put on by clubs or churches. Some were supper parties...

The Wichita Daily Eagle of Wichita, Kansas on October 30, 1890.
... Others were all about games.


Ladies' party games were hand-me-downs from old European traditions:

"To walk down cellar [stairs] or around the house backward, holding a lookingglass [sic], at midnight, will insure a view in the glass of one's future partner in marriage. Stir a little salt in the yolk of an egg, and eat it before retiring, or say the Lord's prayer backward, and prophetic visions will come in dreams." ~ The Emporia Weekly News of Emporia, Kansas on November 6, 1874.
 




Coming Around the Corner ~




Surprise!

Right away (before Halloween), I'll have a "spooky" Sweet Romance Short Story set in the Victorian American West, amid my Holidays in Mountain Home Series. This story will be FREE (my gift!) to my newsletter subscribers. Don't delay!  Sign up right away to receive my newsletter notice of this free read.

[Every newsletter has an easy-to-unsubscribe link, opportunity to enter a drawing (every single month) for valuable prizes, only important news, and guaranteed safeguarding of your private information.]

Speaking of Newsletters ~ Our Sweet Romance Reads Newsletter is the bomb! Ripe with extras, freebies, up-to-date information about your favorite Sweet Romance Authors, this once-per-quarter newsletter is a favorite!

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See Related Blog Posts:

Victorian America Celebrates Halloween


No Matter How You Say It...

Victorian America's Sense of Humor

Kristin Holt's Newsletter

Copyright © 2017 Kristin Holt LC