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First Valentine
On Februay 14th in 1849, the first American-made
valentines were sold in Worcester. They were designed and made by
Esther Howland, the daughter of a local stationer. After graduating
from Mt. Holyoke College, she returned to Worcester and began making
valentines modeled on a fancy one she had received from an English
friend. Her brother took the samples on a sales trip and came home
with an astonishing $5,000 worth of orders. Howland began by hiring
her friends to assemble the valentines; within a few years, she
built her business into a $100,000 a year enterprise, a notable
success for any entrepreneur but a truly remarkable accomplishment
for a nineteenth-century woman.
When Esther Howland was growing up in the 1830s, it
seemed unlikely she would make her mark as "The Mother of the
American Valentine."
Her father owned the largest book and stationery store
in Worcester. His success allowed him to send Esther to Mount Holyoke
Female Seminary. At Mt. Holyoke, Esther participated in annual Valentine
festivities (later banned by the college for being too frivolous).
Shortly after she completed her studies in 1847, one of her father's
business associates happened to send her an elaborate English valentine.
German immigrants to the U.S. had brought with them
a tradition of cutting paper hearts for loved ones, and in the first
half of the nineteenth century, other Americans were beginning to
exchange simple cards on which they wrote their own sentimental
verses.
But English valentines were entirely different. The
Industrial Revolution began in England several decades before it
did in the U.S.; English factories mass-produced intricately detailed
paper, which could be embossed with flowers and adorned with perforated
paper lace. Thesefancy valentines were extremely expensive to import,
so very few circulated in the United States.
Esther Howland guessed correctly that the growing
emphasis on romantic love made America an untapped market for English-style
valentines. She was confident that, given the right materials, she
could copy the English designs. Esther Howland invented what was
essentially a new industry. In only a few years, her creativity
and skill turned a nascent cultural phenomena — the celebration
of romantic love — into a booming business.
She knew that the key to the fancy valentine was fancy
paper. Esther asked her stationer father to import some embossed
and perforated lacy paper for her. He did, and in 1849 she made
12 sample valentines. Her brother took them along on his next sales
trip. She hoped she might receive $200 in orders and was taken by
surprise when her brother returned with orders worth 25 times that
amount for fancy valentines.
Esther Howland was determined to meet the demand.
She had envisioned a small home-based business appropriate for an
unmarried lady, but she soon revised her plan. She recruited a group
of her friends to work out of her home as "assemblers."
She also distributed boxes of supplies with one finished sample
as a guide to women who preferred to assemble the valentines in
their own homes.
When she was satisfied that she could turn out valentines
in quantity, Howland began to establishher business. She placed
advertisements in local papers and took orders through her family's
stationery shop. When her activities outgrew her family's house,
she moved the operation to a rented building in downtown Worcester.
It was Esther Howland's unique designs that separated
her valentines from those of the competitors who soon flattered
her with imitation. She introduced countless variations, including
multiple layers of paper or lift-up flaps, and accordion-like folds
that elevated one portion of the design and created a shadowbox
effect. She pioneered the use of colored paper wafers set beneath
different sections of the perforated paper and overlaid embossed
flowers.
To capitalize on the Victorians' feeling that romantic
sentiments were private and should be kept secret, Esther Howland
created separate sheets with a variety of "mottos" that
could be pasted inside the card. She published a book of 131 different
verses that dealers could use to help customers personalize their
valentines.
An astute businesswoman, she developed valentines
for all budgets. Her simpler cards started at five cents, but highly
elaborate and personalized valentines — with ribbon trimmings,
pages of artistry illustrations, hidden doors, and sometimes an
inner envelope for a secret love message, lock of hair, or ring
— could sell for as much as $50, equivalent to the cost of
a horse drawn buggy! By making — and spending the money to
advertise — a high-quality product in a wide range of prices,
Esther Howland built the New England Valentine Company into a flourishing
business.
To care for her ailing father, in 1881 Esther Howland
sold out to another Worcester stationer, who was already producing
machine-cut valentines and who added a line of cards in the "Howland
Style." Worcester remained the "Valentine Capital of America"
well into the twentieth century.
Sources
American Antiquarian Society online exhibition, "Making
Valentines: A Tradition in America."
"Esther Howland Exhibit," prepared for Greeting
Card Association, 2001.
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