A History of St. Valentine's Day — Whiting-Robertsdale Historical Society (2024)

Frank Vargo and Anthony Borgo
February 2019

As most of the world gets ready to celebrate St. Valentine’s Day this month, let’s take a look at why we celebrate this day in the middle of February.

Although the Valentine’s Day we know got its start in the European Middle Ages, we can go back to the Romans who had special activities associated with love and mating at this time of the year. In ancient Rome, the names of young women were put into a box.

When the boy pulled out the name of a young woman, they were considered partners for the new year, which according to the early Roman calendar began in March.

When the teaching of the Catholic Church spread over Europe, this celebration took on a more religious theme. The Church actually recognizes three Valentines in its list of saints. Each St. Valentine had his feast day on February 14.

Many legends have been associated with St. Valentine. One had him imprisoned and, while there, he cured the daughter of his jailer of her blindness. Another story, in an attempt to associate him more closely with St. Valentine’s Day, said that he fell in love with the jailer’s daughter and sent her a letter which he signed, “From your Valentine.”

In the Middle Ages, people throughout Europe believed that birds mated on February 14. This belief, that birds chose their mates on St. Valentine’s Day, led to the idea that boys and girls should do the same.

As early as the 15th century in England, men wrote “amorous addresses” to their lady love. A legend said that a young lady was supposed to eventually marry the first male that she met on St. Valentine’s Day.

Not everyone viewed expressions of love as something that should be celebrated. The Puritans in the New England colonies did not allow any public displays of affection on any day of the year. Thus, when Captain Kemble of Boston, in a burst of passion kissed his wife in public, he was sentenced to two hours in the stocks for “lewd and unseemly behavior.” The captain had just returned from a three year voyage.

By the 1720s, the custom of writing valentine verses and making valentine cards was becoming more popular. Cupids, hearts, lover’s knots and gentle turtledoves were sometimes drawn on these homemade signs of affection. Commercial valentines came out around 1800 and by 1840 the first “mechanical” valentines were produced. By pulling a tab, an object or figure on the card could be made to move. Pop-outs and other three-dimensional features were also a part of some greeting cards. Comic valentine cards were first designed about 1870 in the United States.At the turn of the 20th century, postcards became a popular way of sending valentine greetings.

In 1912, one lucky family from Whiting received more than cards and candy for Valentine’s Day. Mrs. Sophia Wuestenfelt, one of Whiting’s pioneers, had the distinction of presenting the most substantial valentine gifts on record. Sophia, who was 75 years old at the time, presented her four children and one daughter-in-law with a $100 bill. One hundred dollars in 1912 equates to $2,590 today. Wuestenfelt, whose husband had passed away, presented her gifts to the following: Herman (son) of Whiting, August (son) of Alton, Illinois, Sophie Dans (daughter) of Rolling Prairie, Indiana, Mary Momuth (daughter) of Chicago, Illinois, and Mrs. William Wuestenfelt (daughter-in-law) of Chicago.

According to the Hammond Times in February 1929, Hammond Postmaster McHie estimated that approximately 20,000 valentines were sent through the Hammond post office. “Grown-ups weren’t allowed to forget Valentine’s Day either. Shop windows (throughout the Calumet region) displayed valentines of all sorts. In bakery windows there were heart shaped cookies and cakes, and in candy shops there were fat red hearts of all sizes containing chocolates, stick candy, or nuts.”

Socialites in Whiting were extremely busy during Valentine’s Day. Over the years several societies and clubs held valentine themed parties and celebrations. Dinners were held with party favors, sweet treats, and the exchange of cards.

The Times stated that in 1936 St. Valentine’s Day was set to see a number of new ideas incorporated. “The up-to-date variety of sentiment no longer goes in for cooing turtle doves and extravagant effusions, but it’s just as sincere.” Valentines exchanged by youths shied away from the idea of love and were replaced with the term “like” to represent friendship. Even the images on the cards were different. “Stuck on the card may be a bit of sponge to denote a man’s hair or a feather masquerading as a duck’s tail.”

During World War II, several stores featured advertisem*nts in The Times reminding people not to forget the boys overseas. Anyone interested in purchasing a valentine for a serviceman could do so, and then the store would make sure it was sent to one of the brave men or women in the armed forces.

Another trend in America was sending comical valentines to family and friends. However, according to a 1945 Hammond Times article, not everyone found these cards funny. “A sense of humor - it’s wonderful! But when some guy sends you a comic valentine making fun of your wife or another flinging slimy (and as you might surmise, anonymous) cracks at your allegedly foul private life - Well it ain’t funny, buddy.” Many “regionites” expressed disfavor at the vulgar and obscene nature of the comic valentines offered for sale. The following is a poem that grew criticism in Hammond, “The beauty shops of our fair city, Have worked like heck to make you pretty - Apparently, it’s all in vain, Your face gives me the same old pain.”

Today valentine greetings are made to be sent to nearly everyone – friend, relative, and sweetheart. St. Valentine’s Day is second only to Christmas in the number of greeting cards sent in the United States.

A History of St. Valentine's Day — Whiting-Robertsdale Historical Society (2024)

FAQs

What is the dark history of St. Valentine's day? ›

One Valentine was a priest in third-century Rome who defied Emperor Claudius II after the ruler outlawed marriage for young men. St. Valentine would perform marriages in secret for young lovers, ultimately leading to his death.

What is the true story of St. Valentine? ›

One Saint Valentine was supposedly a Roman priest who performed secret weddings against the wishes of the authorities in the third century. Imprisoned in the home of a noble, he healed his captor's blind daughter, causing the whole household to convert to Christianity and sealing his fate.

What is the history of Valentine's day history? ›

The 8th-century Gelasian Sacramentary recorded the celebration of the Feast of Saint Valentine on February 14. The day became associated with romantic love in the 14th and 15th centuries, when notions of courtly love flourished, apparently by association with the "lovebirds" of early spring.

What is the truth behind Valentine's day? ›

Turns out, it was a pretty common name during Late Antiquity. As far as anyone can tell, the Saint Valentine of Valentine's Day was one of two guys preaching the good word in Rome in the third century. One of these two was martyred on February 14th 269, thus giving us the date for his eponymous day.

Why was St. Valentine removed from the Catholic Church? ›

Valentine as a saint of the church, he was removed from the General Roman Calendar in 1969 because of the lack of reliable information about him.

What is the evil meaning behind Valentine's day? ›

According to the National Public Radio, Emperor Claudius II executed two men named Valentine on Feb. 14. Their martyrdom is honored by the Catholic Church on St. Valentine's Day.

What does the Bible say about Valentine's day? ›

1 John 4:7-12. Dear friends: let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.

Why was St. Valentine jailed? ›

Emperor Claudius II had banned marriage because he thought married men were bad soldiers. Valentine felt this was unfair, so he broke the rules and arranged marriages in secret. When Claudius found out, Valentine was thrown in jail and sentenced to death.

Who was the killer on Valentine's day? ›

On Valentine's Day 1929, Thompson submaching guns shot and murdered seven men from Chicago's North Side Gang, headed by George Clarence “Bugs” Moran. Though the perpetrators of the massacre officially remain unidentified, many believe that members of Al Capone's South Side Gang are the culprits.

What are some interesting facts about Saint Valentine? ›

Here are 10 facts about the man behind Valentine's Day.
  • He was a 3rd century Roman clergyman. ...
  • He had the power of healing. ...
  • “From Your Valentine” originates from a letter of his. ...
  • His skull is on display in Rome. ...
  • His blood was gifted by Pope Gregory XVI. ...
  • He is the patron saint of epilepsy. ...
  • He may have been two different people.
Feb 14, 2020

What is the real meaning of Valentine? ›

The day was commemorated for martyred saints named—you guessed it—Valentine. Differing legends celebrate three different saints called Valentine or Valentinus, but since very little was known about these men and there were conflicting reports of the St.

What is special on 14 February 2024? ›

Happy Valentine's Day 2024: Valentine's Day falls annually on February 14. The celebrations for the day of love begin a week before, starting with Rose Day and ending with Kiss Day.

What is the real dark story of Valentine's day? ›

Legend has it that this Saint Valentine challenged Emperor Claudius II's decree that men make better soldiers when single. He married lovers in secret and was killed for treason upon discovery of this act. Others believe Valentine's Day is the namesake holiday of Saint Valentine of Terni.

What is a real fact about Valentine? ›

The first valentine was sent in the 15th century.

The oldest record of a valentine being sent, according to History.com, was a poem written by a French medieval duke named Charles to his wife in 1415. Charles penned this sweet note to his lover while he was imprisoned in the Tower of London at just 21 years old.

Should Christians celebrate Valentine's day? ›

If that works for you, do it. But the biblical pattern teaches us that romantic love between husband and wife should be on display often and much. It isn't that celebrating Valentine's Day is too much; it is too little and weak. Christians, live your married years so that you don't need Valentine's Day.

What is the horror story behind Valentine's day? ›

Emperor Claudius II executed two men — both named Valentine — on Feb. 14 of different years in the third century. Their martyrdom was honored by the Catholic Church with the celebration of St. Valentine's Day.

What is the tragic history of Valentines day? ›

In short, it could be said that the meaning of Valentine's Day commemorates Saint Valentine's brutal and bloody three-part execution – beating, stoning, and beheading – because of his secret support of Christian marriages.

What was the real St. Valentine's day massacre? ›

Valentine's Day Massacre. On February 14, 1929, seven members and associates of George “Bugs” Moran's bootlegging gang were lined up against a wall and shot dead inside the garage at 2122 North Clark Street. Al Capone's Chicago Outfit was widely suspected of ordering the hit, but no one was ever prosecuted.

What is the mystery behind Valentine? ›

But behind the rosy facade of Valentine's Day is a mysterious—and grisly—tale of a beheading and body parts scattered across Europe. The Catholic martyr St. Valentine was beheaded on that date in the third century, supposedly for breaking a Roman ban on performing marriages.

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