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Exhibits and Projects > Exhibit of Valentines

VALENTINE GREETINGS: SHIFTING FROM HOWLAND TO HALLMARK

AN EXHIBIT ,Ground Floor of Dwight Hall
February 1 - February 23, 2007

Each year, the Mount Holyoke Archives and Special Collections displays valentines from the collection in honor of Esther Howland, a Mount Holyoke alumna credited with having established the commercial valentine industry in the United States. Howland graduated from the Seminary in 1847 and, inspired by an ornate English valentine, began creating her own elaborate renditions of the greeting card. The exhibit contains a selection of original valentines made by her New England Valentine Co., as well as some by George C. Whitney, the designer who bought Howland's increasingly popular company in the early 1880's. These valentines have been paired with photographs from the Seminary's highly decorated, Victorian-style parlors in order to show a connection between the interior spaces these designers inhabited and the aesthetic displayed in their mid-to-late nineteenth century greeting cards. Other valentines displayed point at stylistic shifts within the valentine industry as it endured paper shortages, postcard crazes and a growing nostalgia for the Victorian-style cards that characterized the golden age of valentine production in both Western Europe and the United States. Another stylistic theme explored in the exhibit is a shift to valentines reflecting racial and ethnic stereotypes in the early twentieth century

For more information about the Valentine collection, a detailed finding aid to the collection is available online.

 

The Valentines shown in this online exhibit date from about 1899-1935. Many of them were printed in Germany or Great Britain.

 

 

Like many motion pictures, newspaper cartoons, and other forms of popular entertainment, Valentines sometimes reflected racial and ethnic stereotypes prevalent in the United States.

 

 

Several of the most ornate Valentines were made by George Whitney's company.

 

 

Valentines with "hinges" that allowed heads, feet, eyes, and flower petals to move must have been particularly entertaining.

 

 

To see the valentines in person, visit the lobby of Archives and Special Collections on the ground floor of Dwight Hall.

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Copyright © 2007 Mount Holyoke College. This document has been improperly attributed. Last modified on February 2, 2007.