Showing posts with label Black Friday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Friday. Show all posts

Saturday, November 25, 2017

Wives MUST Buy Correct Christmas Gift for Husbands (1896)





Yesterday was Black Friday!
Have you recovered yet?


I love the Victorian American Era, and constantly study original, vintage sources for the fiction I write. Why? Because an accurate, true-to-history backdrop for fiction makes all the difference.

Not long ago, I came across an article that made me laugh. So much has been the same about Christmastime and Holiday Celebrations in the United States over the last one hundred and fifty years--and so much is drastically different.

http://www.kristinholt.com/archives/2771

Throughout the Victorian Era, Americans enjoyed (can anyone truly enjoy?) Christmas shopping...without "Cyber Monday" or any online shopping at all. Most of us associate "catalog" shopping with the nineteenth century, so you're likely to be surprised how late such an option came into being.

http://www.kristinholt.com/archives/3243


http://www.kristinholt.com/archives/3236

Through most of the era, Americans did their Christmas shopping the old-fashioned way. Store by store. In December's bone-aching chill. Without climate-controlled malls and certainly without central heating.

To make matters worse, merchants knew how to guilt women into finding "just the right gift". Merchants probably do the same thing today--I just haven't noticed.

I did notice, however, this charming newspaper advertisement in the Clinch Valley News of Tazewell, Virginia, published on December 18, 1896. Because certainly, if that young wife whom the Harrison, Surface & Company targeted in their advertisement precisely one week before Christmas Day, hadn't yet found that perfect gift, then shame. Shame on her! She'd better hurry in and spend a full twenty-five cents on a men's handkerchief. If that's not enough, she might splurge on shirt studs ranging from 25 cents to a full 75 cents.

Before we chuckle at how very little wives had to spend on their husbands in 1896, let's compare a dollar value then vs now.

What cost $1.00 in 1896 would cost $29.25 in 2016. (latest year offered)

The Silk Umbrella (Best) offered by this clothing department store at $3.75 (ouch!):
What cost $3.75 in 1896 would cost $109.67 in 2016. (latest year offered)


The offerings of the fine clothing department at Harrison, Surface & Company is best taken in full context. The ad itself, given it is roughly 121 years old and is now digitally scanned (and who knows whether the poor quality is due to age or a failure of newfangled technology)... so I've provided a transcription of the article as well as the original (I mean, the facsimile.).

Clinch Valley News of Tazewell, VA. 18 December, 1896.

Now, the careful transcription, everything spelled in context [sic], keeping as close as possible to the same run-on paragraph structure.

GOT A HUSBAND?

Of course you have, or you would not be reading this ad. What are you going to do to make his Christmas happy? Do you know that lots of men dread the coming of Christmas? yes, indeed, they do. And it is all because they are so often remembered with something that they do not want. Don't let anything of that kind mar your husband's Christmas.-- Here's a store full of things for men, bought to sell to men, bought to delight men, bought for men to wear. Want a happy place to come to, if you have a husband or brother on your Christmas list. We've bought to sell to "him" and that we know what "he" needs and wants are here and waiting for you. What a happy man he'll be who discovers his wife try to hide a HARRISSON, SURFACE & CO. bundle from his sight. Not many misgivings can that lucky fellow have about his Christmas.

Men's handkerchiefs, 10c., 15c., 20c., 25c.
Silk handkerchiefs, 50c., 75., $1.00.
Walking Sticks, 35c., 50c., 75c.
Silk Umbrellas, $2.50, $3.00, $3.75.
Cuff Buttons, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00.
Fine Neckwear, 25c, 35c, 50c, 60c, 75c.
Dongola and Patent Leather Slippers, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75.
Fine Gloves, 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50.
Shirt Studs, 25c, 50c, 75c.
Scarf Pins, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00.
Collar Buttons, 10c, 25c, 50c.

Harrison, Surface & Company.
Clothing Department.

TAZEWELL,   --   --   --   --   --   VIRGINIA.



Do you feel the same type of pressure while Christmas shopping for loved ones today?

Does anything about Christmas shopping in 1896 surprise you?


http://www.KristinHolt.com/


I love writing books about holidays--well beyond "the holidays" of Christmas and New Year's (though I do write those, too). 

http://www.kristinholt.com/holidays-in-mountain-home-series

The Halloween Short Story I gave away last month is part of this Holidays in Mountain Home Series. Have you read that story? (The Witching Eve) I'd love to hear what you thought.

Have you signed up for our Sweet Romance Reads Newsletter

Copyright © 2017 Kristin Holt LC

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Black Friday, a Tradition by Raine English

Families have many traditions, especially around the holidays. A favorite of mine is one that I started years ago and share with my daughter—it’s our Black Friday outing. We look forward to it each year, and not just because it kick-starts the Christmas shopping season, but because it’s a time for just the two of us to have fun.

Each Thanksgiving evening, after we’ve stuffed ourselves with turkey and all the trimmings, we nap for a few hours, then hit the road so that we’ll be at the mall by midnight. We scour the stores looking for bargains but stay away from any that attract a huge crowd. Neither one of us enjoys dealing with that madness.


Around 3:00 A.M., we take a break from the stores to drink mocha lattes and review our purchases. Some years we haven’t had much luck finding gifts, and others we wind up getting most of our Christmas shopping done. But our outing isn’t really about that. It’s about being together.  I know there are lots of other things we could do besides wandering the mall in the wee hours of the morning, and I know there are those who might think we’re crazy for doing it, but we love it. And for me, having a mother/daughter event that I can count on yearly is very, very special, even though it leaves me exhausted for the rest of the day.


What’s your special holiday tradition?

~*~

USA Today bestselling author Raine English writes sweet small-town romances. She lives in New England with her family and her French bulldog, Bailey. 

Her latest release, Some Christmas Magic, is available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Kobo. 

For information on all of her books, visit her website at www.RaineEnglish.com.