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Christmas Humor of the 19th Century

Illustration: Santa Claus

Introduction: In this article, Mary Harrell-Sesniak searches old newspapers to find our ancestors’ Christmas humor from the 19th century. Mary is a genealogist, author, and editor with a strong technology background who has written and collected some of the funniest, quirkiest, or most touching sayings about genealogy that she’s encountered in her career as a family historian. Please attribute this article if sharing.

From jokes about holes in stockings to ones about Santa, there’s a myriad of old-time humor just waiting to be found in old newspapers, such as GenealogyBank’s Historical Newspaper Archives. Below find some of this year’s picks. Hope you enjoy them!

Here’s a mischievous use of mistletoe:

Photo: 1895 Puck Christmas issue. Credit: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.

Note: With just a few exceptions (for example, by the humorist with the pseudonym “Puck”), these Christmas jokes were shared from paper to paper and printed with no attribution, which is why this article features them by date.

1850

Mississippi Free Trader (Natchez, Mississippi), 13 March 1850, page 2

1880

Anderson Intelligencer (Anderson, South Carolina), 23 December 1880, page 5

1886

Motto for Christmas card:

“You know that I love you,
and love you right hard,
or why would I trouble
to send you this card?”

1889

Cambria Freeman (Ebensburg, Pennsylvania), 20 December 1889, page 5

1890

1892

Mistletoe again…

Goodland Republic (Goodland, Kansas), 16 December 1892, page 3

Hope you have enjoyed these humorous Christmas posts – but remember, whether you celebrate Christmas, Hannukah, Kwanzaa, or otherwise, we wish all of our readers a very happy and humorous holiday season!

 

 

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