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This post is number 4 in a series of 24 for the 2011 Advent Calendar of  Christmas Memories.
On the 21st day  of Christmas,
my true  friends sent to me
Christmas Cards from their  family.
1) Did your family send  them?
My parents sent Christmas cards to family and friends all of  their lives. My mother made them for many years (I know I have several in my  boxes of stuff...somewhere) - usually a fairly simple madonna or angel theme  with a "Merry Christmas" and "from the Seaver family" or something similar. I  remember a single color (red or green) stencil on card stock folded into a card,  with writing on the inside.
2) Did your family  display the ones they received?
In my childhood home, I don't  remember having a mantle or shelf space that had displayed cards. I'm sure that  my mother displayed them somewhere - perhaps on a bulletin board in the entry  way. I'll have to ask my brothers. I wish I could remember more about this time  of my life.
We received cards from my father's mother and siblings in New  England which often had family letters in them. These were prized because this  family never made long distance phone calls and rarely wrote letters, so this  was our only contact each year with the family 2,500 miles away.
3) Do you still send Christmas cards?
Oh yes!  That's what the post-Thanksgiving hecticity (is that a word?) is all about. "We  have to get this done so we can do this and this next ..." Angel Linda is a  taskmaster. This solemn process includes:
* Finding the boxes of cards  bought during the year at thrift shops or 99 cent stores. Or going out and  buying more. We only get angel cards, naturally.
* Randy prints off the  Christmas card address list and Linda updates it. The list is then printed on  peel-off labels.
* Linda affixes the labels on envelopes, puts the return  address labels (hopefully, Christmas motif) on the envelopes, and puts stamps on  the envelopes.
* Randy writes the two-page Christmas letter (more on this  in a later post), Linda edits it, and Randy creates 120 copies of it (this takes  about four days to finish).
* Linda writes messages on the cards, since  Randy thinks that the Christmas letter covers everything that could be said.  Linda's handwriting is much better, too! Randy and Linda stuff the letters in  the envelopes and seal the envelopes.
* We typically send these out in  early December - soon!
This process takes about ten days from start to  finish, but it's now a tradition and we have a proven process for it. I also  send the Christmas letter to email correspondents, but I don't want to post it  online because it has some personal details not appropriate for the world to  see. If you want one, please send me an email address (if I don't already have  one - at rjseaver@cox.net).
4)  Do you have any cards from your ancestors?
I think we have a few from my grandparents, but none from earlier generations.  They would be in one of the treasure boxes buried in the genealogy cave!
Originally  published on 4 December 2007 (edited since)
Welcome to my genealogy blog. Genea-Musings features genealogy research tips and techniques, genealogy news items and commentary, genealogy humor, San Diego genealogy society news, family history research and some family history stories from the keyboard of Randy Seaver (of Chula Vista CA), who thinks that Genealogy Research Is really FUN! Copyright (c) Randall J. Seaver, 2006-2024.
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