Valentine Phantom

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February 14, 2007 at the Vermont State House. The Valentine Phantom struck early on a snowy morning.

The Valentine Phantom, often referred to as the Valentine Bandit in media reports, refers to an individual or group who each Valentine's Day secretly decorate the downtown area of a city with a flurry of red hearts printed on sheets of letter-sized paper. The perpetrator(s) remain unknown and speculation about what individual or group decorates before dawn each February 14 is popular in conversation, and local media, and over the past ten years has emerged as an example of vernacular culture. The term "bandit" is a misnomer as no law is broken, nothing is stolen or removed but the reverse occurs: valentines appear.

The earliest known occurrence of this phenomenon was 1976 in Portland, Maine. The first Valentine's Phantom struck in 1976 in Portland, which garnered reports in the newspapers the Evening Express and the Maine Sunday Telegram. Every year since, red hearts have appeared throughout the city on Valentine's Day morning. In 2002, the city of Montpelier became a part of the yearly tradition, with the added twist of each heart including a poem signed "The Valentine Phantom". (See Vermont History, below.)

Beginning in the early 2000s, someone or a group of people have similarly posted red hearts drawn on white sheets of paper on the front doors of businesses along the Pearl Street business district in Boulder, Colorado each Valentine's Day, according to reports[1] in the Daily Camera newspaper. In Boulder, the mysterious Valentine's messenger has been dubbed the "kissing bandit."

On Valentine's Day 2010, pink hearts appeared up and down St. Johnsbury, Vermont's Railroad & Main Street, even finding their way to the local police and fire department buildings.

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[edit] Vermont History

Montpelier's incarnation of the phenomenon began in 2002 near the corner of Main Street and State Street. The windows of shops were covered in 8.5" x 11" color copies of red hearts. They appeared before dawn, and for the most part were welcome and not seen as a nuisance. In subsequent years the center remained the intersection of Main and State streets, but grew outward to include Langdon Street, Elm Street, and lower State Street near the State House and the Pavilion. This raised speculation that the Valentine Phantom might be a team.

In 2006, for the first time, the "bandit" applied banners with large red hearts around the base of the columns on the portico of the Vermont State House. They were photographed, reproduced on web blogs and on the website of the Friends of the Vermont State House. These same banners were again displayed on the statehouse in 2007. On Valentine's Day 2008, they appeared on the chimney stack of Montpelier High School and on the tower of College Hall at the Vermont College of Fine Arts. In 2009, they were hung over the entrance of the Kellogg-Hubbard Library and from the landslide cliff on Elm Street. In 2010, 2 heart banners were hung from the Langdon Street Bridge.

Langdon Street Bridge, Montpelier VT, February 14, 2010

On Valentine's Day 2007, the phenomena became larger, and coincided with a dumping of heavy snow. The Times Argus reported "Despite the snow, however, the Valentine bandit visited the Statehouse and other buildings in Montpelier on Wednesday to put up large red paper hearts. Other state buildings, stores and restaurants were also visited during the night, with business windows throughout downtown Montpelier covered in the red paper hearts – a mystery that has become a Valentine’s Day tradition in the state’s capital city."[2] For the first time, sculptural hearts painted red were planted on the public lawn[3] in front of the State House. A blizzard brought a fresh coat of snow setting off the bright red heart sculptures. The Vermont State House Sergeant at Arms, Francis Brooks, allowed the valentine banners and sculptures to remain through the day.

During the winter of 2008, the slate roof on the steeple of the Methodist church on Main Street in Montpelier was replaced by Southgate Steeple Jacks. The new slate roof features several red hearts around the base of the steeple. Jay Southgate designed the new roof for the church and was quoted in the Montpelier Bridge saying that the use of the hearts was inspired by Montpelier's Valentine Phantom. Coincidentally, February 14, 2008 was the first sunny, calm day in several weeks, allowing the Southgate crew to resume their work on the roof — that's the day they began to place the red slate of the hearts on the steeple.

On September 1, 2009, rainbow hearts mimicking the Valentine Bandit appeared around Montpelier to celebrate the legalization of same-sex marriage in Vermont.

A Valentine Phantom Phan Page was launched on Facebook in 2010. [1]

[edit] References

  • Michael Sletcher. New England. Westport, CT, 2004.
  1. ^ Miller, Vanessa. (15 February 2008) Mystery hearts return to Boulder's Pearl Street Daily Camera. Accessed 15 February 2008.
  2. ^ Staff reports. (14 February 2007) 'Storm of the Century' hits Vermont - 7:00 p.m. Times Argus. Accessed 2 May 2007.
  3. ^ Wallace-Brodeur, Jeb. (14 February 2007) Valentine bandit strikes again Times Argus. Accessed 2 May 2007.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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