
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


I always found it very intriguing that there was a Boxing Day celebration here in Canada, because it wasn't something that I had ever experienced in the United States.
According to information I have found, it wasn't until 1871 that Boxing Day did become an official holiday in the United
In Ontario, Boxing Day was much like Black Friday in the United States in that it was a major shopping day there in all of the shopping malls across the province.
Ten years ago, when we moved to New Brunswick, I was
I have a sneaking suspicion that there may have been some
So, it's not a day to strap on the gloves. And get in the ring, but rather it's a day to get together, share gifts, and in many of the provinces in Canada to have a major shopping time.
So, to look at the history of Boxing Day, it may go all the
Legend holds that Wunchalus actions started a tradition in
A second tradition is that it originates from the practice of the aristocracy giving their employees bonuses and presents on the day after Christmas. As the stories go, employees would take their boxes home and open them up with their families, hence Boxing Day. We may not know precisely how this holiday came to be, but we do know one thing.
The first recorded mention of Boxing Day comes from an 1830s version of the Oxford English Dictionary. The definition given is the first weekday after Christmas Day, observed as a holiday on which postmen, errand boys, and servants of various kinds expect to receive a Christmas box.
In other words, according to this definition, Boxing Day is
Just because we closed the stores here in New Brunswick on Boxing Day, That doesn't mean that there still aren't a lot of sales, because what we have here is Boxing Week. In terms of significance, the holiday spirit of gift and almsgiving. It's generally faded away from memory. It's become a commercial holiday, and we take advantage of it just as much as they do in the United States on Black Friday.
By Mark J Brewer, HostI always found it very intriguing that there was a Boxing Day celebration here in Canada, because it wasn't something that I had ever experienced in the United States.
According to information I have found, it wasn't until 1871 that Boxing Day did become an official holiday in the United
In Ontario, Boxing Day was much like Black Friday in the United States in that it was a major shopping day there in all of the shopping malls across the province.
Ten years ago, when we moved to New Brunswick, I was
I have a sneaking suspicion that there may have been some
So, it's not a day to strap on the gloves. And get in the ring, but rather it's a day to get together, share gifts, and in many of the provinces in Canada to have a major shopping time.
So, to look at the history of Boxing Day, it may go all the
Legend holds that Wunchalus actions started a tradition in
A second tradition is that it originates from the practice of the aristocracy giving their employees bonuses and presents on the day after Christmas. As the stories go, employees would take their boxes home and open them up with their families, hence Boxing Day. We may not know precisely how this holiday came to be, but we do know one thing.
The first recorded mention of Boxing Day comes from an 1830s version of the Oxford English Dictionary. The definition given is the first weekday after Christmas Day, observed as a holiday on which postmen, errand boys, and servants of various kinds expect to receive a Christmas box.
In other words, according to this definition, Boxing Day is
Just because we closed the stores here in New Brunswick on Boxing Day, That doesn't mean that there still aren't a lot of sales, because what we have here is Boxing Week. In terms of significance, the holiday spirit of gift and almsgiving. It's generally faded away from memory. It's become a commercial holiday, and we take advantage of it just as much as they do in the United States on Black Friday.