Birthday and Birthstone Postcards
One of the earliest postcards that related months to lucky gemstones and their symbolism as omens was the 1907 embossed and gilded "Birthday Souvenir" by The Colortype Company of Chicago, Illinois. Ostensibly designed as a single birthday card suitable for anyone, it opened the door to the creation of many twelve-card sets of birthstone greetings that delved into zodiacal gemstone magic, character analyses, and the language of flowers.
The poem on this card follows the familiar sing-song pattern i call "the English Enchantment," This scansion, with a variety of wording, is found on many fortune telling tea cups, as seen at our sister-site, The Mystic Tea Room in the page about Poetry on Cups and Saucers. Dating back at least to the Renaissance and the writing of William Shakespeare, such verses are found to this day in the metrical magical spells of the Anglo-Saxon people.
Birthday Souvenir
Among the gems that here abound
Your birthstone will be surely found
Good fortune may it always bring,
Tho' set in locket or in ring.
And may the years that to you come
Bring joy wherever you may roam;
May health and peace be ever yours
And love that thro' all time endures;
So look upon your birthstone here,
Where all the other gems appear,''
And know that yours I deem the best,
Tho' rare and beauteous be the rest.
All twelve stones are arrayed on a single ribboned necklace, with words around each stone, as follows:
January: Garnet: Friendship
February: Amethyst: Sincerity
March: Bloodstone: Courage
April: Diamond: Purity
May: Emerald: Happiness
June: Agate: Health
July: Ruby: Love
August: Sardonyx: Felicity
September: Sapphire: Wisdom
October: Opal: Hope
November: Topaz: Fidelity
December: Turquoise: Success
Around the same time, the Knickerbocker Jewelry Company of New York City also released a postcard that advertised the birthstones of the months. The stones were the same as shown on the Colortype postvcard and their attributions were similar or identical.
The Tiffany Birthstone Poem of 1870
For further thoughts about the origins of concerning the magical attributions of these birthstones and their symbolism, see
- The Tiffany Birthstone Poem from 1870, which influenced all such early 20th century postcards.
And the, before taking the Tiffany list of months and meanings for each gemstone as definitive or authoritative, it must be compared with other sets of correspondences. These postcard sets reflect eary 20th century beliefs about the birthstones:
I have more than dozen different sets of birthstone postcards which include , character analysis and zodiac attributions. They were released by a variety of publishers, and date from 1907 through 1925. I will periodically add sets to the list above until they are all online and this little notice disappears.
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Thank you.
catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
Your Wate and Fate