This bit of Christmas cheer was written for the Library of
Congress Magazine by intern Jacqueline Cerda. It has been adapted and
expanded for this blog.
Dear (You),
Hustling after Christmas presents, sending season’s greetings to all
the lovely people on your list – well, honestly, it can wear a body
down.
So let’s take a moment to send a little holiday cheer out in memory
of ye merry olde Henry Cole, the British civil servant and patron of the
arts who, in 1843, created the commercial Christmas card. It was, by
coincidence, the same year that Charles Dickens published “A Christmas
Carol.” The two creations, and the iconography they inspired, went a
long way to establishing the Victorian concept of Christmas, which, in
turn, we now regard as the “traditional” Christmas.
Cole, born in 1808, was the son of a military man. After his formal
education, he took clerk and government jobs while befriending artistic,
high-minded sorts, including the philosopher John Stuart Mill. By the
time Cole was in his 30s, he was spending a large part of each December
dashing off one Christmas letter after another. This got a be a
considerable drag on his energies, if not his holiday cheer. A man of
action, he commissioned friend and illustrator John Calcott Horsley to
design a card that would express his cheerful sentiments to all and
sundry.
Horsley came up with an image of three generations of a family
celebrating with food and drink, along with panels illustrating
Christian charity. The message: “A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
to You.” The card also included blank lines where Cole could fill in the
name of the recipient and his as the sender. (One might notice that the
mom appears to be giving her child a rather large glass of wine, but
let’s not tut-tut about that now.)
Horsley used chromolithography, a lengthy process that involved
multiple layers of color and shading. Once the design was finished,
thousands of copies could be made. All Cole had to do was address, sign
and mail each one. Joy! The British postal system — dubbed the Penny
Post, which he had helped found — was expanding and affordable, so
expense was not an issue.
The charming illustration and affordable postage made Cole and
Horsley’s creation an enticing alternative to writing holiday letters
individually. Cole’s acquaintances realized how efficient the card was
and followed suit.
And thus, boys and girls, the Christmas card was born.
Cole, a busy and inventive sort, was no one-hit wonder. He wrote
children’s books (he had eight kids), did much to develop British
railroads, helped promote better engineering and architectural design in
a number of disciplines, became a trusted friend of Queen Victoria, and
served as the founding director of what became the Victoria &
Albert Museum, which is still a world-class institution in London.
So there you have it, a happy little holiday tale, just in time for Christmas.
A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to You,
via https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2019/12/dear-whoever-you-are-heres-the-first-christmas-card/
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