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→Origin of Black Friday
==Origin of Black Friday==
Black Friday may have its origins from the late 19th century and early 20th century, when department stores across the United States began to become not only larger but also more competitive. The term itself was not originally associated with shopping but with a major stock market crash on September 24, 1869. However, that meaning and event lost relevance over the course of the 20th century. In relation to Christmas, department stores, such as Macy's or Lord and Taylor, held annual parades on the day after Thanksgiving as part of their brand promotion and sales for the Christmas shopping period. Many people took the day off after Thanksgiving off, creating a type of free holidayvendors wanted to take advantage of. Department stores took advantage of this by promoting their brand and sponsoring large parades. Usually these parades were advertising oriented to promote the new products for sale that year or offer offered discounts on given shopping items in the lead up to Christmas. Usually, department stores and other retailers did not advertise their Christmas items for sale until after Thanksgiving. The department stores, as they grew in influence, began to set a trend in using the day after Thanksgiving as the launch of the Christmas shopping seasonthat generally became more accepted across the United States. As more and more stores adopted the trend sent by the department stores, people generally began to see the Friday after Thanksgiving as a time when deals and sales , even the best possible sales of that year, might be offered to entice them over rival shopping competitors. For decades, however, the Friday after Thanksgiving was widely known as the beginning of the shopping season for Christmas but no reference existed for that day.<ref>For more on the development of department stores and their Christmas promotion attempts, including parades, see: Kathan BW (2017) <i>American Holy Days: The Heart and Soul of Our National Holidays</i>. Eugene: Wipf and Stock Publishers. Available at: http://public.eblib.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=5050880 (accessed 29 November 2019). </ref>
It is not clear what led to or when the term "Black Friday" came into existence in reference to the day after Thanksgivingas a time that launched the Christmas shopping season. Most likely, in Philadelphia during the late 1950s or early 1960s, increased shopping traffic and pedestrian traffic getting to stores led to more frequent traffic jams and accidents. There was also increased crime as shoplifting and even violent crime increased, leading to the police and other emergency services having to increase their presence during that day. For many emergency services personnel, Black Friday became a dreaded day when they knew they would be busy. Some people began to see that day as disruptive, particularly people who did not take part in the shopping. The term may have then begun as a pejorative for the disruption but soon shoppers themselves or at least the media began to use the term more frequently by the early 1960s. By the 1960s, the term Blac Friday became widely used. Since the 1960s until the late 1990s, Black Friday remained relatively similar, with stores traditionally offering discounts and sales. However, some stores began to try to gain initial advantages by moving Black Friday sales earlier or even open opening very early on Black Friday at around midnight or even early in the morning.<ref>For more on the origin of the term "Black Friday" and its usage, see: Forbes BD (2015) <i>America’s Favorite Holidays: Candid Histories</i>. Oakland, California: University of California Press.</ref>
[[File:Macys-thanksgiving-day-parade-getty-97281886.jpg|thumb|Figure 1. The Macy's annual Christmas Parade the day after Thanksgiving helped to launch the Christmas shopping season.]]