Valentines Day History

Sending Valentine's Day is the fashion of the 19th century in Britain. In 1847, Esther Holland developed a successful work at her home in Worcester, Massachusetts, and designed a Valentine's Day card based on British models. Valentine's Day cards were popular in the United States in the 19th century, many of which became public greeting cards rather than love ads, a sign of future US commercial marketing. One of the Hallmark holidays.

Modern: In 1797, a British publisher published a small book on Valentine's Day containing dozens of young fans of feelings and suggestions who could not write their own books. Printers began to produce a limited number of cards with books and graphics, dubbed "mechanical love", and reduced postage rates in the next century lower cost individuals than postage, but it is easier to do so. This, in turn, made possible the exchange of anonymous cards for the first time, and these cards were considered the reason for the sudden emergence of vibrant poetry in the Victorian era, otherwise, it would be wise.

Valentine's Day was very famous in the UK in the early 19th century and began to collect Valentine's Day at the factory. In the UK, less than half of the population spends Valentine's Day, and more than £ 2 billion a year is spent on cards, flowers, chocolates and other gifts, of which 25 million are sent. It is estimated that the card was born in the 1940s after the birth of Lee Erik Sc Schmidt. A writer of the monthly magazine Graham American wrote in 1849, "Valentin ... On National Day, he became the grandson of America's first great work." After 1847, Massachusetts Esther Holland (1828-1904), Worcester, produced and sold a paper-etched paper.





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