What’s the Real History of Black Friday?
The retail bonanza known as Black
Friday is now an integral part of many Thanksgiving celebrations, but this
holiday tradition has darker roots than you might imagine. The first recorded
use of the term “Black Friday” was applied not to holiday shopping but to
financial crisis: specifically, the crash of the U.S. gold market on September
24, 1869. Two notoriously ruthless Wall Street financiers, Jay Gould and Jim
Fisk, worked together to buy up as much as they could of the nation’s gold,
hoping to drive the price sky-high and sell it for astonishing profits. On that
Friday in September, the conspiracy finally unraveled, sending the stock market
into free-fall and bankrupting everyone from Wall Street barons to farmers. The
most commonly repeated story behind the post-Thanksgiving shopping-related
Black Friday tradition links it to retailers. As the story goes, after an
entire year of operating at a loss (“in the red”) stores would supposedly earn
a profit (“went into the black”) on the day after Thanksgiving, because holiday
shoppers blew so much money on discounted merchandise. Though it’s true that
retail companies used to record losses in red and profits in black when doing
their accounting, this version of Black Friday’s origin is the officially
sanctioned—but inaccurate—story behind the tradition. In recent years, another
myth has surfaced that gives a particularly ugly twist to the tradition,
claiming that back in the 1800s Southern plantation owners could buy slaves at
a discount on the day after Thanksgiving. Though this version of Black Friday’s
roots has understandably led some to call for a boycott of the retail holiday,
it has no basis in fact.
The true story behind Black
Friday, however, is not as sunny as retailers might have you believe. Back in
the 1950s, police in the city of Philadelphia used the term to describe the
chaos that ensued on the day after Thanksgiving, when hordes of suburban
shoppers and tourists flooded into the city in advance of the big Army-Navy
football game held on that Saturday every year. Not only would Philly cops not
be able to take the day off, but they would have to work extra-long shifts dealing
with the additional crowds and traffic. Shoplifters would also take advantage
of the bedlam in stores to make off with merchandise, adding to the law
enforcement headache. By 1961, “Black Friday” had caught on in Philadelphia, to
the extent that the city’s merchants and boosters tried unsuccessfully to
change it to “Big Friday” in order to remove the negative connotations. The
term didn’t spread to the rest of the country until much later, however, and as
recently as 1985 it wasn’t in common use nationwide. Sometime in the late
1980s, however, retailers found a way to reinvent Black Friday and turn it into
something that reflected positively, rather than negatively, on them and their
customers. The result was the “red to black” concept of the holiday mentioned
earlier, and the notion that the day after Thanksgiving marked the occasion
when America’s stores finally turned a profit. (In fact, stores traditionally
see bigger sales on the Saturday before Christmas.)
The Black Friday story stuck, and
pretty soon the term’s darker roots in Philadelphia were largely forgotten.
Since then, the one-day sales bonanza has morphed into a four-day event, and
spawned other “retail holidays” such as Small Business Saturday/Sunday and
Cyber Monday. Stores started opening earlier and earlier on that Friday, and
now the most dedicated shoppers can head out right after their Thanksgiving
meal. According to a pre-holiday survey this year by the National Retail
Federation, an estimated 135.8 million Americans definitely plan to shop over
the Thanksgiving weekend (58.7 percent of those surveyed), though even more
(183.8 million, or 79.6 percent) said they would or might take advantage of the
online deals offered on Cyber Monday.
https://www.history.com/news/whats-the-real-history-of-black-friday
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