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Started By
Message
Happy Front Day 2025
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:31 pm
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:31 pm
Dear Friends,
Thus does Mother declare, without blush or doubt, Front Day will arrive by the next morning. The soul which chooses hot chocolate over liquor and sacred hymns over cacophony has chosen rightly. For in such choices dwell gentility, grace, and that quiet gladness which neither ennui, anxiety, nor Satan’s snares can undo.
Glory to God in the highest! Front Day has come once again, and we are here to celebrate and give thanks. Another hurricane season behind us, our cups overflow with thanksgiving and joy and maybe even marshmallow cream on this high day of our Crescent City. I think it not an accident that, this year, Front Day coincides with All Saints’ Day, the first ever All Saints’ Front Day. And so today, after our labors to wash and clean our family's portal of the Resurrection have been accomplished, we shall open our party with William How's sacred canticle For All the Saints.
Today is our day. We shall drink and be merry. Our cups will warm us with chocolate, whose steam ascends as an incense at the altar. Chocolate shall pulse softly through our veins as a whisper of love. Bring forth laughter lacking lunacy, warmth without wildness, communion without corruption. Kakawa, Ghirardelli, Max Brenner, Saxon, Scharffen Berger, or Swiss Miss: we shall taste of the Lord's glory. Our merriness is in the Lord, our Rock, Fortress, Might, Captain, and Light!
Dear friends, I pray you join us in our home tomorrow evening as the shadows begin to emerge on the eastern side of City Park’s haunting oaks. Mother's famous Calliope Chocolate Chip Cookies shall mound on an oversized pecan wood Industrious Susan that Uncle fashioned this year for the occasion. We have 27 types of drinking chocolate available, and each year we are in awe of the offerings our friends bring. Will we break last year’s Front Day record of 36 different hot chocolates? We gladly welcome all and we desire that each of you bring one hymn request. Although we can never guarantee that all requests will be filled, we shall do our utmost. Blessings to you and compliments of this glorious season to your loved ones.
Faith, Hope, and Love,
TulaneLSU
P.S. The history of Front Day stretches all the way back to 1911. Mother claims to have invented Front Day in 1998, but Grandmother always corrects her when she makes that claim. Grandmother is happy to tell you the story of her grandmother minting the day in 1911 after that brutally hot summer, which was the standard for hot New Orleans summers for 69 years until 1980 reared its sun on us. Grandmother tells the story like this:
“My Grandmother, your Great, Great Grandmother was the first known New Orleanian to celebrate Front Day. Your Mother heard my bedtime stories about Front Day as a little girl, and she has done well to revive and cultivate the holiday. But she was acting on an idea my Grandmother created.
“Grandmother talked about the heat during the summer of 1911. She was part of a volunteer women’s auxiliary from Christ Cathedral and First Presbyterian Churches tasked with decorating the Isaac Delgado Museum of Art in City Park. This is the museum that later became NOMA, which I know you so love visiting. It opened during the Advent season, I believe December 15, of 1911.
“Anyway, Grandmother talked about how that summer was unrelenting. Three times each week, she took the St. Charles and Canal St. streetcars before fetching a horse drawn carriage from Canal St. to City Park. She talked about how hot working in the stone building was.
“September of 1911 was hotter than any month she had ever felt, and this was in a time when Septembers were usually closer weatherwise to what we think of as October or even early November weather.
“When the morning of October 18, 1911 broke, my Grandmother was up with the sun. She recalled until her last days how it was one of the most beautiful days of her life. The sunrise was perfect and a light northerly wind brushed her face with temperatures in the low 50s reminding her of the goodness of creation. She felt so wonderful that she left early that morning and walked the entire distance to the museum, which was a five mile jaunt.
“Once the women were finished with their duties that afternoon, my Grandmother invited them all back to her Prytania home. There she had a lovely spread which included hot chocolate from Switzerland she purchased from the Katz & Bestoff on Canal, which became the future site of the failed Hard Rock Hotel. Thomas, the church organist, was summoned, and quickly arrived to play their custom home organ. I can still picture her indelible, childlike smile when she reminisced about singing those hymns and drinking chocolate on that first Front Day.
“She and her friends gathered for years on each first sunny day of Autumn with highs below 80 and lows below 60. When Front Day came on October 21, 1929, celebrations were held as usual, but three days later, Black Thursday hit America. Some of her friends were ruined, and they associated Front Day with the stock market crash. And never again in her lifetime did the people of New Orleans celebrate that great day. It disappeared until your Mother revived it.
“Unlike your mother, the original Front Days did not have to be on Saturday. I wish your mother would change that requirement.”
Previous Front Days:
1911: October 18 (77/53)
1912: October 24 (79/50)
1913: October 13 (79/56)
1914: October 15 (69/53)
1915: October 8 (74/56)
1916: September 30 (73/52)
1917: October 9 (77/51)
1918: September 21 (73/51)
1919: November 3 (78/54)
1920: September 30 (79/49)
1921: October 4 (79/59)
1922: October 9 (70/54)
1923: October 20 (68/50
1924: September 30 (71/53)
1925: October 20 (73/48)
1926: October 2 (79/58)
1927: September 23 (78/55)
1928: October 19 (78/58)
1929 October 21 (76/57)
1998: October 10 (75/56)
1999: October 23 (72/57)
2000: October 7 (71/56)
2001: October 20 (79/56)
2002: November 2 (66/53)
2003: November 15 (80/50)
Mother projected a high of 78 this day, making it the only time in 25 years she has failed accurately to predict Front Day.
2004: November 6 (71/47)
2005: October 29 (71/49)
2006: October 28 (69/54)
2007: October 27 (70/55)
2008: October 25 (77/52)
2009: October 17 (67/54)
2010: October 30 (76/50)
2011: October 22 (75/53)
2012: October 27 (64/53)
2013: October 26 (74/51) The week before met the temperature definitions, but was rainy.
2014: October 4 (73/57)
2015: November 14 (67/57)
2016: October 22 (75/57)
2017: November 11 (72/54)
2018: October 27 (75/55)
2019: October 26 (79/57)
2020: October 31 (70/52)
2021: October 30 (68/53)
2022: October 22 (79/56)
2023: November 4 (77/55)
2024: October 19 (77/57)
2025: November 1
Front Day 2020
Front Day 2021
Front Day 2022
Front Day 2023
Front Day 2024
We tarry back now to our home, delayed only briefly by the lack of air traffic controllers. We shall see you tomorrow.
Thus does Mother declare, without blush or doubt, Front Day will arrive by the next morning. The soul which chooses hot chocolate over liquor and sacred hymns over cacophony has chosen rightly. For in such choices dwell gentility, grace, and that quiet gladness which neither ennui, anxiety, nor Satan’s snares can undo.
Glory to God in the highest! Front Day has come once again, and we are here to celebrate and give thanks. Another hurricane season behind us, our cups overflow with thanksgiving and joy and maybe even marshmallow cream on this high day of our Crescent City. I think it not an accident that, this year, Front Day coincides with All Saints’ Day, the first ever All Saints’ Front Day. And so today, after our labors to wash and clean our family's portal of the Resurrection have been accomplished, we shall open our party with William How's sacred canticle For All the Saints.
Today is our day. We shall drink and be merry. Our cups will warm us with chocolate, whose steam ascends as an incense at the altar. Chocolate shall pulse softly through our veins as a whisper of love. Bring forth laughter lacking lunacy, warmth without wildness, communion without corruption. Kakawa, Ghirardelli, Max Brenner, Saxon, Scharffen Berger, or Swiss Miss: we shall taste of the Lord's glory. Our merriness is in the Lord, our Rock, Fortress, Might, Captain, and Light!
Dear friends, I pray you join us in our home tomorrow evening as the shadows begin to emerge on the eastern side of City Park’s haunting oaks. Mother's famous Calliope Chocolate Chip Cookies shall mound on an oversized pecan wood Industrious Susan that Uncle fashioned this year for the occasion. We have 27 types of drinking chocolate available, and each year we are in awe of the offerings our friends bring. Will we break last year’s Front Day record of 36 different hot chocolates? We gladly welcome all and we desire that each of you bring one hymn request. Although we can never guarantee that all requests will be filled, we shall do our utmost. Blessings to you and compliments of this glorious season to your loved ones.
Faith, Hope, and Love,
TulaneLSU
P.S. The history of Front Day stretches all the way back to 1911. Mother claims to have invented Front Day in 1998, but Grandmother always corrects her when she makes that claim. Grandmother is happy to tell you the story of her grandmother minting the day in 1911 after that brutally hot summer, which was the standard for hot New Orleans summers for 69 years until 1980 reared its sun on us. Grandmother tells the story like this:
“My Grandmother, your Great, Great Grandmother was the first known New Orleanian to celebrate Front Day. Your Mother heard my bedtime stories about Front Day as a little girl, and she has done well to revive and cultivate the holiday. But she was acting on an idea my Grandmother created.
“Grandmother talked about the heat during the summer of 1911. She was part of a volunteer women’s auxiliary from Christ Cathedral and First Presbyterian Churches tasked with decorating the Isaac Delgado Museum of Art in City Park. This is the museum that later became NOMA, which I know you so love visiting. It opened during the Advent season, I believe December 15, of 1911.
“Anyway, Grandmother talked about how that summer was unrelenting. Three times each week, she took the St. Charles and Canal St. streetcars before fetching a horse drawn carriage from Canal St. to City Park. She talked about how hot working in the stone building was.
“September of 1911 was hotter than any month she had ever felt, and this was in a time when Septembers were usually closer weatherwise to what we think of as October or even early November weather.
“When the morning of October 18, 1911 broke, my Grandmother was up with the sun. She recalled until her last days how it was one of the most beautiful days of her life. The sunrise was perfect and a light northerly wind brushed her face with temperatures in the low 50s reminding her of the goodness of creation. She felt so wonderful that she left early that morning and walked the entire distance to the museum, which was a five mile jaunt.
“Once the women were finished with their duties that afternoon, my Grandmother invited them all back to her Prytania home. There she had a lovely spread which included hot chocolate from Switzerland she purchased from the Katz & Bestoff on Canal, which became the future site of the failed Hard Rock Hotel. Thomas, the church organist, was summoned, and quickly arrived to play their custom home organ. I can still picture her indelible, childlike smile when she reminisced about singing those hymns and drinking chocolate on that first Front Day.
“She and her friends gathered for years on each first sunny day of Autumn with highs below 80 and lows below 60. When Front Day came on October 21, 1929, celebrations were held as usual, but three days later, Black Thursday hit America. Some of her friends were ruined, and they associated Front Day with the stock market crash. And never again in her lifetime did the people of New Orleans celebrate that great day. It disappeared until your Mother revived it.
“Unlike your mother, the original Front Days did not have to be on Saturday. I wish your mother would change that requirement.”
Previous Front Days:
1911: October 18 (77/53)
1912: October 24 (79/50)
1913: October 13 (79/56)
1914: October 15 (69/53)
1915: October 8 (74/56)
1916: September 30 (73/52)
1917: October 9 (77/51)
1918: September 21 (73/51)
1919: November 3 (78/54)
1920: September 30 (79/49)
1921: October 4 (79/59)
1922: October 9 (70/54)
1923: October 20 (68/50
1924: September 30 (71/53)
1925: October 20 (73/48)
1926: October 2 (79/58)
1927: September 23 (78/55)
1928: October 19 (78/58)
1929 October 21 (76/57)
1998: October 10 (75/56)
1999: October 23 (72/57)
2000: October 7 (71/56)
2001: October 20 (79/56)
2002: November 2 (66/53)
2003: November 15 (80/50)
Mother projected a high of 78 this day, making it the only time in 25 years she has failed accurately to predict Front Day.
2004: November 6 (71/47)
2005: October 29 (71/49)
2006: October 28 (69/54)
2007: October 27 (70/55)
2008: October 25 (77/52)
2009: October 17 (67/54)
2010: October 30 (76/50)
2011: October 22 (75/53)
2012: October 27 (64/53)
2013: October 26 (74/51) The week before met the temperature definitions, but was rainy.
2014: October 4 (73/57)
2015: November 14 (67/57)
2016: October 22 (75/57)
2017: November 11 (72/54)
2018: October 27 (75/55)
2019: October 26 (79/57)
2020: October 31 (70/52)
2021: October 30 (68/53)
2022: October 22 (79/56)
2023: November 4 (77/55)
2024: October 19 (77/57)
2025: November 1
Front Day 2020
Front Day 2021
Front Day 2022
Front Day 2023
Front Day 2024
We tarry back now to our home, delayed only briefly by the lack of air traffic controllers. We shall see you tomorrow.
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:32 pm to TulaneLSU
Tomorrow is a real Front Day unlike last year's day of lies and deceit.
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:37 pm to TulaneLSU
quote:
Grandmother always corrects her when she makes that claim. Grandmother is happy to tell you the story of her grandmother minting the day in 1911 after that brutally hot summer,
I love stories that involve the ole whore
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:38 pm to The Boat
quote:
Tomorrow is a real Front Day unlike last year's day of lies and deceit.
Will there be a dew point day?
This post was edited on 10/31/25 at 6:17 pm
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:40 pm to TulaneLSU
Front day for us was earlier this week and it was glorious...
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:40 pm to TulaneLSU
I regret I shall be unable to attend, but my hymn request is Just A Closer Walk With Thee
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:43 pm to The Boat
quote:
Tomorrow is a real Front Day unlike last year's day of lies and deceit.
Front Day is judged by the thermometer in Mother’s backyard
The NWS is full of shite
Posted on 10/31/25 at 5:58 pm to TulaneLSU
Lies. All lies. Last year’s Front Day was a farce, so they all are now.
Posted on 10/31/25 at 6:06 pm to TulaneLSU
quote:
TulaneLSU
I thought they said you were dead?
With every post, you show why everyone fricking hates Jesuit.
Posted on 10/31/25 at 6:06 pm to The Boat
Lol we had front day like a month ago.
New Orleans is so gay
New Orleans is so gay
Posted on 10/31/25 at 6:08 pm to TulaneLSU
And a glorious Front Day to you as well.
And a happy All Hallow's Eve
You may appreciate this
This site is poorer from your dearth of lovely prose
And a happy All Hallow's Eve
You may appreciate this
This site is poorer from your dearth of lovely prose
Posted on 10/31/25 at 6:56 pm to TulaneLSU
quote:
TulaneLSU
The bullshite you and your whore "mother"* pulled last year disqualifies you from anything to do with Front Day.
I hope your hot chocolate is cold and your advent calendar falls apart.
*Respectfully, of course.
This post was edited on 10/31/25 at 6:58 pm
Posted on 11/1/25 at 10:08 am to TulaneLSU
What a glorious day!
God is good!
God is good!
Posted on 11/1/25 at 10:17 am to TulaneLSU
Amen brother. I celebrated front day with a brisk 4 mile walk at dawn followed by scripture from Mark's gospel. We are blessed
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