The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Cheers! Or not: ‘Scandalous’ 1st Christmas card up for sale

- By William J. Kole

The first commercial­ly printed Christmas card is up for sale — a merry Victorian-era scene that scandalize­d some who denounced it as humbug when it first appeared in 1843.

The card, being sold online starting Friday through a consortium run by Marvin Getman, a Boston-based dealer in rare books and manuscript­s, depicts an English family toasting the recipient with glasses of red wine.

“A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to You,” it reads. But for teetotaler­s — and there were plenty of those in the 19th century — the imagery included a bit too much holiday cheer: In the foreground, a young girl is pictured taking a sip from an adult’s glass.

That didn’t sit well at the time with the puritanica­l Temperance Society,

which kicked up such a fuss it took three years before another Christmas card was produced.

“They were quite distressed that in this ‘scandalous’ picture they had children toasting with a glass of wine along with

the adults. They had a campaign to censor and suppress it,” said Justin Schiller, founder and president of Kingston, New York-based Battledore Ltd., a dealer in antiquaria­n books who is selling the card.

Getman, whose brokerage had shifted online before the coronaviru­s pandemic disrupted traditiona­l touring book fairs, said the hand-colored lithograph is believed to have been a salesperso­n’s sample.

Only 1,000 copies were printed and sold for a shilling apiece, and experts believe fewer than 30 have survived, he said.

The card, intended to double as a greeting for Christmas and New Year’s Day, was designed by painter and illustrato­r John Callcott Horsley at the suggestion of Sir Henry Cole, a British civil servant and inventor who founded the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Cole is widely credited with starting the tradition of sending holiday cards, a multimilli­on-dollar industry today.

It’s believed to have gone on sale in the same week in December 1843 that Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” first was published.

Christie’s auction house in London also is selling one of the rare cards and says it expects the item to fetch between 5,000 and 8,000 pounds ($6,725 to $10,800.)

 ?? DENNIS M V DAVID/BATTLEDORE LTD. VIA AP ?? This 2017 photo provided Thursday, Dec. 3, by Battledore Ltd., of Kingston, N.Y., shows the first commercial­ly produced Christmas card dated December 1843. The card, a hand-colored lithograph designed in England by John Callcott Horsley, is among the rare holiday-themed items being sold online through a consortium run by Marvin Getman, a Boston-based dealer in rare books and manuscript­s, through the weekend beginning at noon on Friday, Dec. 4.
DENNIS M V DAVID/BATTLEDORE LTD. VIA AP This 2017 photo provided Thursday, Dec. 3, by Battledore Ltd., of Kingston, N.Y., shows the first commercial­ly produced Christmas card dated December 1843. The card, a hand-colored lithograph designed in England by John Callcott Horsley, is among the rare holiday-themed items being sold online through a consortium run by Marvin Getman, a Boston-based dealer in rare books and manuscript­s, through the weekend beginning at noon on Friday, Dec. 4.

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