BOXING Day – Celebrated December 26, 2010

 

 

 

December 26, 2010

 

 

When is Boxing Day

 

Boxing Day is a secular holiday, but is traditionally celebrated on 26 December, St. Stephen’s Day, the day after Christmas Day.

 

Whenever the 26th December falls on a Sunday traditionally Boxing Day is moved to the 27th December— supposedly to ensure that Sunday church-going and other Sunday observance is maintained. In Britain, Boxing Day is usually celebrated on the following day after Christmas Day, which is 26 December. However, strictly speaking, Boxing Day is the first weekday after Christmas (see definition in the Oxford English Dictionary). Like Christmas Day, Boxing Day is a bank holiday (public holiday) throughout Britain. When Christmas Day falls on a Friday or Saturday, Boxing Day, which is a bank holiday, is the following Monday.

In Ireland—when it was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland—the UK’s Bank Holidays Act 1871 established the feast day of St Stephen as a non-movable public holiday on 26 December. Since the Irish War of Independence, the name “Boxing Day” is used only by the authorities in Northern Ireland (which remained part of the United Kingdom). There, Boxing Day is a movable public holiday in line with the rest of the United Kingdom.

The Banking and Financial Dealings Act of 1971 established “Boxing Day” as a public holiday in Scotland. In the Australian state of South Australia, 26 December is a public holiday known as Proclamation Day and Boxing Day is not normally a public holiday. However, Canada, the USA, and many other countries use Boxing Day for commercial use. Items usually cost less and many sales are on. Traditionally people would save one of their gifts that was still wrapped and donate it to charity. Now it has turned into a much more commercial occasion, mainly for people to save money on many items.

Boxing Day is a bank or public holiday occurring on 26 December that is observed in Australia, Austria, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and in some Commonwealth of Nations with a mainly Christian population. In South Africa the public holiday 26 December is called Day of Goodwill, in Ireland St Stephen’s Day or Lá an Dreoilín, and in continental European countries the “Second Christmas Day.”

Though it is not an official holiday in the United States, the term “Boxing Day” is used by some Americans, particularly those who live near the Canada – United States border. In Canada, Boxing Day is listed in the Canada Labour Code as an optional holiday. Only in the province of Ontario has it been made a statutory holiday where all workers receive the time off with pay.

 

Etymology

The exact etymology of the term “boxing” is unclear and there are several competing theories, none of which is definitive.  The tradition has long included giving money and other gifts to those who were needy and in service positions. The European tradition has been dated to the Middle Ages, but the exact origin is unknown and there are some claims that it goes back to the late Roman/early Christian era; metal boxes placed outside churches were used to collect special offerings tied to the Feast of Saint Stephen.

One of the clues to Boxing Day’s origins can be found in the Christmas Carol, “Good King Wenceslas.” Wenceslas, who was Duke of Bohemia in the early 10th century, was surveying his land on St. Stephen’s Day — Dec. 26 — when he saw a poor man gathering wood in the middle of a snowstorm. Moved, the King gathered up surplus food and wine and carried them through the blizzard to the peasant’s door. The alms-giving tradition has always been closely associated with the Christmas season — hence the canned-food drives and Salvation Army Santas that pepper our neighborhoods during the winter — but King Wenceslas’ good deed came the day after Christmas, when the English poor received most of their charity.

 

PHOTO:  http://www.heritage-images.com/

 

In the United Kingdom, it certainly became a custom of the nineteenth-century Victorians for tradesmen to collect their “Christmas boxes” or gifts on the day after Christmas in return for good and reliable service throughout the year. Another possibility is that the name derives from an old English tradition: in exchange for ensuring that wealthy landowners’ Christmases ran smoothly, their servants were allowed to take the 26th off to visit their families. The employers gave each servant a box containing gifts and bonuses (and sometimes leftover food). In addition, around the 1800s, churches opened their alms boxes (boxes where people place monetary donations) and distributed the contents to the poor.

To protect ships

During the Age of Exploration, when great sailing ships were setting off to discover new land, A Christmas Box was used as a good luck device. It was a small container placed on each ship while it was still in port. It was put there by a priest, and those crewmen who wanted to ensure a safe return would drop money into the box. It was then sealed up and kept on board for the entire voyage. If the ship came home safely, the box was handed over to the priest in the exchange for the saying of a Mass of thanks for the success of the voyage. The Priest would keep the box sealed until Christmas when he would open it to share the contents with the poor.

To help the poor

An ‘Alms Box’ was placed in every church on Christmas Day, into which worshipers placed a gift for the poor of the parish. These boxes were always opened the day after Christmas, which is why that day became known as Boxing Day.

A present for the workers

During the late 18th century, Lords and Ladies of the manor would “box up” their leftover food, or sometimes gifts, and distribute them the day after Christmas to tenants who lived and worked on their lands. Many poorly paid workers were required to work on Christmas Day and took the following day off to visit their families. As they prepared to leave, their employers would present them with these Christmas boxes.

The tradition of giving money to workers still continues today. It is customary for householders to give small gifts or monetary tips to regular visiting trade people (the milkman, dustman, coalman, paper boy etc.) and, in some work places, for employers to give a Christmas bonus to employees.

 

Calendar

In the countries that observe this holiday, 26 December is commonly referred to both as Boxing Day and as St. Stephen’s Day, no matter what day of the week it occurs.  However, in some countries, holidays falling on Saturday or Sunday are observed on the next weekday. Traditionally, Boxing Day could not be on a Sunday, that day being the officially recognized day of worship, so it was the next working day of the week following Christmas Day, (i.e. any day from Monday to Saturday). But in recent times, this tradition has been either forgotten or ignored. Most, but not all, calendars and media outlets consider 26 December to be Boxing Day even when it falls on a Sunday.

If Boxing Day falls on a Saturday (as in 2009), then Monday 28 December is declared a bank or public holiday. In the United Kingdom and some other countries, this is accomplished by Royal Proclamation. In some Canadian provinces, Boxing Day is a statutory holiday that is always celebrated on 26 December. In Canadian provinces where Boxing Day is a statutory holiday, and it falls on a Saturday or Sunday, compensation days are given in the following week.

If Boxing Day falls on a Sunday, then Christmas Day would be on a Saturday, so in countries where these are both bank or public holiday, the Statutory Holiday for Christmas is moved to Monday 27 December and the Statutory Holiday for Boxing Day is moved to Tuesday 28 December, as it has happened in 2010.

If Christmas Day falls on a Sunday, then Boxing Day is on Monday 26 December, and no Royal Proclamation is required. In such a circumstance, a ‘substitute bank holiday in the place of Christmas Day’ is declared for Tuesday 27 December, so the Boxing Day holiday occurs before the substitute Christmas holiday.

 

Legality

Although the same legislation—the Bank Holidays Act 1871—originally established the bank holidays throughout the United Kingdom, the day after Christmas was defined as Boxing Day in England, Scotland and Wales, and the feast day of St Stephen in Ireland. (Note that a ‘substitute bank holiday in place of 26 December’ is only possible in Northern Ireland, reflecting the legal difference in that St. Stephen’s Day does not automatically shift to the Monday in the same way as Boxing Day.)

 

Shopping

In Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and some states of Australia, Boxing Day is primarily known as a shopping holiday, much as the United States treats the day after Thanksgiving. It is a time where shops have sales, often with dramatic price decreases. For many merchants, Boxing Day has become the day of the year with the greatest revenue. In the UK in 2009 it was estimated that up to 12 million shoppers appeared at the sales (a rise of almost 20% compared to 2008, although this was also affected by the fact that the VAT would go back up to 17.5% from 1 January).

Many retailers open very early (typically 5 am or even earlier) and offer doorbuster deals and loss leaders to draw people to their stores. It is not uncommon for long queues to form early in the morning of 26 December, hours before the opening of shops holding the big sales, especially at big-box consumer electronics retailers.  Once inside, the shoppers often rush and grab, trashing and pillaging as they go, as many stores have a limited quantity of big draw or deeply discounted items.  Because of the shoulder-to-shoulder crowds, many choose to stay home and avoid the hectic shopping experience. The local media often cover the event, mentioning how early the shoppers began queueing up, providing video of shoppers queueing and later leaving with their purchased items.  

The Boxing Day sales have the potential for customer stampedes, injuries and even fatalities.  As a result, many retailers have implemented practices aimed at controlling large numbers of shoppers, most whom are typically irate due to the cold (or, in Australia and New Zealand, hot) weather, and anxious for bargains. They may limit entrances, restrict the number of patrons in a store at a time, provide tickets to people at the head of the queue to guarantee them a hot ticket item, and canvass queued-up shoppers to inform them of inventory limitations.

In recent years, retailers have expanded their deals to “Boxing Week“. While Boxing Day is 26 December, many retailers who hold Boxing Day Sales will run the sales for several days before or after 26 December, often up to New Year’s Eve. Notably in the recession of late 2008, a record number of retailers were holding early promotions due to a weak economy. Canada’s Boxing Day has often been compared with the American Super Saturday, the Saturday before Christmas. In 2009, a number of major Canadian retailers had their own Black Friday promotions in order to discourage shoppers from crossing the border.

In some areas of Canada, particularly in Atlantic Canada and parts of Northern Ontario, most retailers are prohibited by law from opening on Boxing Day. In these areas, sales which would otherwise be scheduled for 26 December are moved to the 27th.

In Ireland, since 1902, St. Stephen’s Day was considered to be a day that most stores would remain closed, similar to Christmas Day. In 2009, some stores decided to open on this day, breaking a 107-year-old tradition. Some stores have also started their January sales on this day.

 

Cyber Boxing Day

The online version of Boxing Day has been referred to as Cyber Boxing Day. In the UK in 2008, Boxing Day was the busiest online shopping day of the year. In 2009, many retailers with both online and High Street stores launched their online sales on Christmas Eve and their High Street sales on Boxing Day.

 

Title photo:  http://homepages.tesco.net/ 
Information:  www.wikipedia.com 

 

A Celebration of Women

sends our hope that all the Women of our World enjoy their BOXING DAY.

 

 

Celebrate & shop with Care!

 

Copyright 2022 @ A Celebration of Women™ The World Hub for Women Leaders That Care