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Revision as of 14:37, 12 September 2006 by Isotope23 (talk | contribs) (Revert bad faith edit. no consensus, please discuss on Talk for consensus before reverting again.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Sweetest Day | |
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Observed by | Mostly Midwest United States |
Celebrations | Remembering friends and loved ones, buying cards and candy |
Date | Third Saturday in October |
Sweetest Day is a holiday celebrated primarily in the Great Lakes region and parts of the Northeast United States (with Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo being the biggest Sweetest Day cities ) on the third Saturday in October. It is described by Retail Confectioners International as an "occasion which offers all of us an opportunity to remember not only the sick, aged and orphaned, but also friends, relatives and associates whose helpfulness and kindness we have enjoyed." Critics call Sweetest Day an artificial holiday created solely to boost the revenues of candy and greeting card companies.
Origin of Sweetest Day
The origin of Sweetest day is frequently attributed to candy store employee Herbert Birch Kingston as an act of philanthropy. However Bill Lubinger, a reporter for The Cleveland Plain Dealer, contends that "...Cleveland's top candy makers concocted the promotion 84 years ago and it stuck, although it never became as widely accepted as hoped." This claim is based on the The Cleveland Plain Dealer October 8, 1921 edition, which chronicles the first Sweetest day in Cleveland. According to the newspaper it was planned by a committee of 12 confectioners, who distributed 19,500 boxes of candy to newsboys, homeless people, orphans, and others who had fallen on hard times in Cleveland, Ohio. The Sweetest Day in the Year Committee was assisted in the distribution of candy by some of the biggest movie stars of the day including Theda Bara and Anne Pennington. Leigh Eric Schmidt traces the origin back to 1910 in his book Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays, where he argues that "Sweetest Day" is a later incarnation of the failed attempt to create a "Candy Day" holiday.
Sweetest Day Today
This tradition now largely involves giving small presents such as greeting cards, candy, and flowers to loved ones. While it is not as large or widely observed as Valentine's Day, it is still celebrated in parts of the United States; despite persistent allegations of being a Hallmark holiday.
References
- http://www.netglimse.com/holidays/sweetest_day/origins_and_facts_about_sweetest_day.shtml
- http://www.retailconfectioners.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=60196&module_id=3418
- http://www.retailconfectioners.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=60196&module_id=3418
- http://www.theromantic.com/sweetestday.htm
- The Cleveland Plain Dealer October 15, 2005
- The Cleveland Plain Dealer October 8, 1921 and October 8, 1922
- The Cleveland Plain Dealer October 8, 1921 and October 8, 1922
- http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=gglsc&d=5000558728
Further reading
- Maud Lavin, ed. (2004-10-04). The Business of Holidays. Monacelli. ISBN 1580931502.
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(help) - Leigh Eric Schmidt (1995-09-01). Consumer rites : the buying & selling of American holidays. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691029806.
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(help)- Reviewed in Scott C. Martin (1997). "Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays". Journal of Social History. 31.
- Bennett Madison and James Dignan (2002-12-28). I Hate Valentine's Day. Simon Spotlight Entertainment. ISBN 0689873727.
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External links
- Watch the Sweetest Day Movie on YouTube!
- Michael Webb. History of Sweetest Day "Origins and Facts About Sweetest Day". TheRomantic.com.
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value (help) - Poem, Quotes, Recipes and Facts on Sweetest Day
- Website titled The Real History of Sweetest Day (Slideshow)
- "Sweetest Day was born from one man's kindness…not in the laboratory of a greeting card company". American Greetings Corporation. August 2004.
- "Sweetest Day 2005". Hallmark Cards. September 2005.