The Everything Family Christmas Book

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Authors: Yvonne Jeffrey
made mass production of these cards possible.

At one time in Britain, the Post Office (also known as the Royal Mail) delivered on Christmas Day, which is when most people received their cards. As could be expected, this process soon became too much for postal workers, who eventually got the day off.
Across the water in America, the Christmas card was popularized by the firm of Marcus Ward & Co., and later by Louis Prang, a German-born printer and lithographer. Prang first turned his talents toward Christmas cards in 1875, designing and printing them from his Roxbury, Massachusetts, shop. Prang created chromos, as he called the colored lithographs, in eight colors. His cards depicted Nativity scenes, family Christmas gatherings, nature scenes, and later, Santa.
The beauty of Prang’s cards did much to ensure their popularity, but so did his marketing technique. He would hold contests all across the country, offering prizes for the best card designs, which spurred public interest. Prang’s cards went strong until 1890, when the states began importing cheaper cards from German manufacturers. Americans reclaimed the market twenty years later.
Christmas Seals
Like Easter, Christmas has a special seal dedicated to helping those in need. The Christmas Seal, which changes in design each year, was originated in Denmark in 1903 by postal worker Einar Holboell, who felt there should be a special stamp to benefit tuberculosis sufferers. The first seal was printed in 1904, with a picture of Queen Louise of Denmark; more than four million were sold. Sweden followed suit that same year, and Norway had its own seals by 1905.
The original American Seal, designed in 1907 by Emily Bissell, pictured holly, a cross, and the words “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.” By 1908, the Christmas Seal was circulating nationwide for the benefit of various charities. In 1919, the National Tuberculosis Association (later the American Lung Association) became the seal’s sole beneficiary. That same year, the double-barred Cross of Lorraine became the seal’s signature element.

The Christmas Seal is popular in America largely due to the efforts of Emily Bissell, state secretary of the Red Cross in Wilmington, Delaware. Word of the success of the seal in Scandinavia had spread to America, and Bissell sought to use such a seal to keep a local tuberculosis treatment center open.
Christmas Stamps
Christmas stamps, not to be confused with Christmas Seals, are issued seasonally by the post offices of various countries to give the mail some holiday spirit. The stamps generally feature different religious or secular Christmas scenes each year, and are often eagerly awaited by stamp collectors.
The very first Christmas stamps were printed in Canada in 1898; the United States did not have its own until 1962. For some years, the most popular stamp in U.S. history—until the Elvis stamp came along in the 1990s—was a Christmas stamp picturing a reproduction of the Renaissance painting The Adoration of the Shepherds, by the Italian painter Giorgione; more than one billion were printed.
The Christmas Bonus and Other Economic Niceties
The Christmas bonus was first instituted by department store owner F. W. Woolworth in 1899. Woolworth, savvy to the ever-growing fiscal importance of the Christmas shopping season, decided to take steps to ensure that his stores ran smoothly through the frenzied buying time. Working under the assumption that happy workers are reliable and productive workers, Woolworth gave a bonus of $5 to each employee for every year of service, bonuses not to exceed $25—quite a sum of money in those days.

In 1876, publishing magnate James Gordon Bennett, Jr., left his breakfast waiter a Christmas tip of $6,000—perhaps $200,000 in today’s funds. Initially, the flabbergasted waiter gave the money to his supervisor to return, but Bennett later insisted that he had meant to leave the sum. The end result was that Bennett’s tip was—and

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