A Cultural History of Advertising
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A peek at the past, present and future implications of our consumer culture
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A Pictorial History of Santa Claus | The Public Domain Review

A Pictorial History of Santa Claus | The Public Domain Review | A Cultural History of Advertising | Scoop.it

Contrary to what many believe, Santa Claus as we know him today - sleigh riding, gift-giving, rotund and white bearded with his distinctive red suit trimmed with white fur – was not the creation of the Coca Cola Company. Although their Christmas advertising campaigns of the 1930s and 40s were key to popularising the image, Santa can be seen in his modern form decades before Coca Cola’s illustrator Haddon Sundblom got to work. Prior to settling on his famed red garb and jolly bearded countenance, throughout the latter half of the 19th century, Santa morphed through a variety of different looks. From the description given in Clement Moore’s A Visit from St Nicholas in 1822, through the vision of artist Thomas Nast, and later Norman Rockwell, Mr Claus gradually shed his various guises and became the jolly red-suited Santa we know today."

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Open Collections Program: Women Working, Lydia Estes Pinkham (1819–1883)

Open Collections Program: Women Working, Lydia Estes Pinkham (1819–1883) | A Cultural History of Advertising | Scoop.it
k3hamilton's insight:

"Born in 1818 in Lynn, Massachusetts, Lydia Estes was one of the most successful American businesswomen of the 19th century. As a young woman, she worked as a midwife, nurse, and schoolteacher and also became involved in the Female Anti-Slavery Society, the temperance movement, and the pseudoscience phrenology, which made character deductions about a person based on bone irregularities in the skull. In 1843, she married Isaac Pinkham, a wealthy real estate mogul.

In 1873, Pinkham founded the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company in order to market an herbal medicine, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, that she had developed to treat the medical problems of her female friends and family members..."

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