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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow Black Friday Got Its Name
The term Black Friday has for years been synonymous with mayhem at stores, and its origin story has roots in turbulence.
Black Friday began in Philadelphia in the 1960s. Tourists would descend on the city on the day between Thanksgiving and the annual Army-Navy football game held on Saturday. Historians say the Philadelphia police took to calling the day Black Friday because officers had to work long hours and deal with terrible traffic, bad weather and other crowd-related miseries.
Local retailers wanted to draw in shoppers that day. But they disliked the term because of the connotation of the word black in front of a day of the week, which historically has been used to mark unpleasant events. One was Black Tuesday, the day of the stock market crash of 1929, and another, Black Monday, the day in 1987 when the market lost more, on a percentage basis, than on any day in 1929.
Retailers tried to rebrand the holiday Big Friday but were unsuccessful. Businesses later reclaimed the name Black Friday, saying that the day was when stores books went from red ink to black.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/how-black-friday-got-its-name/ar-AARa0Zg?ocid=NL_ENUS_D1_20211126_7_3
msongs
(73,754 posts)iemanja
(57,757 posts)that it was the day that retailers went from red to black on their profit/loss sheet.
I didn't know it related to a football game.
pecosbob
(8,387 posts)IIRC later the sales started to begin on Friday as the commercialization of Christmas went into over-drive in the seventies. My point being that I believe the term Black Friday was not used in connection with holiday shopping until the eighties.