Sending well wishes for the holidays

by Petra Lessoing

86th Airlift Wing Public Affairs


Traditionally, people all over the world send holiday greetings to family members, relatives, friends and customers.

The “happy holidays” greetings are combined with best wishes for the new year.
Today’s Christmas cards have their origin in wishes for the new year.

In the 15th and 16th centuries, educated people gave each other printed and painted New Year’s songs and wishes. Monasteries gave away single sheets of paper with a prayer printed on them for the new year.

First, the wish exchange was only a custom for adults from the upper class.
At the end of the 18th century, teachers made their students write Christmas and New Year’s letters. Then printers noticed there was a market for nice pre-printed Christmas cards.

In England in 1843, painter John Calcott Horsley created the first Christmas card. It was made of three parts: in the middle, a family cheered to the receiver of the card, on the left, hungry people were fed, and on the right part, poor people received gifts to symbolize charity and helpfulness.

Mr. Horsley used stone plates to print his ideas on the cards and colored them by hand. And again, the sending of greeting cards was a privilege of the upper class, since one card cost about one shilling. For many years, the cards did not show any Christmas scenes, but party scenes with people eating and drinking.

About 40 years later, the printing process became cheaper and more and more people could afford to send holiday greetings by mail.

Nowadays, the Christmas card is the only connection two parties still might have.
They never talk to each other or write for a whole year, but as soon as the holidays come, they take out their address book and look through to see who they’ll have to send a Happy Holidays or Christmas and New Year’s card to.