Accounting

Acne

Adsense

Advertising

Aerobics

Affiliate

Alternative

Articles

Attraction

Auctions

Audio Streaming

Auto Care

Auto Parts

Auto Responder

Aviation

Babies Toddler

Baby

Bankruptcy

Bathroom

Beauty

Bedroom

Blogging

Body Building

Book Marketing

Book Review

Branding

Breast Cancer

Broadband Internet

Business

Business Loan

Business Plan

Cancer

Car Buying

Career

Car Insurance

Car Loan

Car Maintenance

Cars

Casino

Cell Phone

Chat

Christmas

Claims

Coaching

Coffee

College University

Computer Tips

Cooking

Cooking Tips

Copywriting

Cosmetics

Craft

Creative Writing

Credit

Credit Cards

Credit Repair

Currency Trading

Data Recovery

Dating

Debt Relief

Diabetics

Diet

Digital Camera

Diving

Divorce

Domain

Driving Tips

Ebay

Ebook

Ecommerce

Email Marketing

E Marketing

Essay

Ezine

Fashion

Finance

Fishing

Fitness

 

 

Article Navigation

Back To Main Page


 

Click Here for more articles

Google
The History of the Christmas Card
by: Catherine Spelling
The Christmas card, as we know it, originated in England in the year 1843. An artist named John Calcott Horsley was commissioned by Sir Henry Cole, a wealthy and successful London businessman, to create a card that could be sent out to his friends and clients to wish them a merry Christmas.

Sir Henry Cole was very well known at the time, for a number of reasons. He had a helping hand in helping to modernize the British postal system. He played a prominent role in the creation of the Royal Albert Hall, and acted as the construction manager on this massive project. He also arranged for the Great Exhibition of 1851, and he oversaw the inauguration of the Victoria and Albert Museum.

One of Sir Henry Cole’s greatest aspirations in life was to beautify the world around him. He owned and operated a wonderful art shop on Bond Street, which specialized in decorative objects for the home. His shop was hugely popular with the British upper class, and he earned a tidy sum from his business.

The Christmas card he commissioned was fashioned in the form of a triptych, which is a three-paneled design that allows for the two outer panels to be folded in towards the middle one. Each of the two side panels depicted a good deed. The first showed an image of people clothing the poor, and the other side panel showed an image of people feeding the hungry. The center piece had an image of a well-to-do family making a toast and surrounded by an enormous feast.

The inscription on the inside of the card read "A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you." Of the one thousand cards printed for Sir Henry Cole, only twelve exist today in private collections. The printed card became highly fashionable in England during the years that followed. They also became very popular in Germany. It took quite a long time for the idea to catch on in America, then popularized by a German expatriate named Louis Prang in 1875. Today, more than 2 billion Christmas cards are exchanged each year. Merry Christmas, all!

About the author:
Catherine Spelling absolutely loves spending Christmas with family and friends. When she is not counting down the days until Christmas, she writes for christmaslightsanddecorations.com – an online resource for all things relating to Christmas and decorations, with information about decorations for Christmas, pre lit Christmas trees, Christmas wreaths and more.


Circulated by Article Emporium

 



Interweber | Directory - All Rights Reserved

Flu

Furniture

Gambling

Golf

Google

GPS

Hair

Hair Loss

HDTV

Health Insurance

Heart Disease

Hobbies

Holiday

Home Business

Home Improvement

Home Organization

Interior Design

Internet Tips

Investment

Jewelry

Kitchen

Ladies Accessories

Lawyer

LCD / PLASMA

Legal

Life Insurance

Lingerie

Love

Mailing List

Make Money

Mortgage

MP3

Music

Network Marketing

Online Shopping

Paid Survey

PC Games

Perfume

Personal Injury

Pay Per Click

Pregnancy

Publishing

Real Estate

Recipe

Recreation

Relationship

Resume

Romance

RSS

Sales Letter

Self Employment

SEO

Shoes

Small Business

Smoking

Software

Spam

Sports

Spyware

Stress

Trading

Travel

Vacation Rental

Video Conferencing

Video Streaming

Virus

VOIP

Web Design

Web Development

Web Hosting

Website Traffic

Wedding

Weight Loss

Wine

Women

Writing Tips