Were you among the crowds camped outside retail stores early this morning, hoping to cash in on Black Friday deals? Perhaps you can even see yourself reflected in these Christmas ornaments hanging in New York City’s Macy’s department store. The day after Thanksgiving is big business for retailers. Last year, 174 million Americans shopped on Black Friday weekend, according to the National Retail Federation, presumably moving retailers’ balance sheets from red (losses) to black (profits). But the term ‘Black Friday’ has a darker history. It was originally used to describe a financial crisis in 1869, and later adopted by Philadelphia police to describe post-Thanksgiving chaos at department stores in their city. Retailers later co-opted the phrase ‘Black Friday,’ giving it more positive connotations–a shift toward profitability at the start of the crucial holiday shopping season.
Let the holiday shopping commence
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Sydney Harbour Bridge in Sydney, Australia
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Ocracoke Lighthouse on Ocracoke Island, North Carolina
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Crown Fountain by Jume Plensa at Millennium Park in Chicago
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A century since Tut s tomb was discovered
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A city of bridges
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An iris garden in Tokyo, Japan
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Wychwood Forest, Oxfordshire, England
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Gunnerside, Yorkshire Dales National Park, England
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That bill s just not going to fit
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Star Wars Day
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Bathing in the light of Pride
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Saint Andrews Day
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World Water Day
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Hoisting a flag for seafarers
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Summer winds down in the Southern Hemisphere
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Through an artist s eyes
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Lunar eclipse
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In the Red Sea for World Dolphin Day
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A step toward freedom
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The scene of a literary crime
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Peña Roya beech forest, Moncayo Natural Park, Aragon, Spain
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Impala in Moremi Game Reserve, Botswana
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Andean cocks-of-the-rock, Ecuador
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Dunquin Pier, County Kerry, Ireland
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A cutting-edge art gallery opens in Paris
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Wyoming celebrates its statehood
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A day for our oceans
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World Meteorological Day
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Rocks on the move
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Winterpret on ice
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

