Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Tis the season for Halloween Postcards


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Halloween is just around the corner and it only fitting that we look at a couple of great Halloween postcards. Halloween is the celebration of All Saints' Day or All Hallows' Eve so now you can see when the name came from. The tradition was brought to the America by the Irish who fled Ireland after the great potato famine of the 1840s. Since the holiday is celebrated around fall harvest time, the traditions are built around pumpkins, apples and harvest scenes. The completion of the harvest was a time when the young single folks thoughts turned to a finding a mate or determining if a girl would marry so the postcards often show couples enjoying the holiday. Rings were baked into cakes and girls would go into gardens to look at the beets and cabbages to find a clue to their future mate. Also contributing to the holiday were the immigrants of Scots-Celtic ancestry who brought with them the poems of Robert Burns and a healthy dose of superstition. Burn's poem "Halloween" shows the holiday as a time for sitting around the fire, telling ghost stories, fortune telling, drinking and couples matching up and sneaking off into the night. His "Tam O' Shanter" story is a great Halloween tale complete with witches, the devil and a scary night. These are a couple of reasons Robert Burns is known as the father of Halloween.
Almost 100 publishers, mostly American, but including English and German companies produced more than 3,000 different Halloween postcards. The premier Halloween postcard publisher was John Winsch from Stapleton New York who began producing postcards in 1910 and the 1911 & 1912 copyrighted postcards are among the best sellers. The Halloween postcards by the artist Samuel L Schmucker, who is considered an Art Nouveau artist, are among the most sought after and command high prices ranging from $70 to over $1,000. The following card from my Halloween Postcard web page is an excellent example of a Winsch Halloween postcard done by the artist Samuel Schmucker.

The second illustration from my website is a beautiful young lady in a Halloween costume complete with a mask and Jack-O-Lanterns around the border.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Postcards featuring unusual buildings Part 10


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Today's unusual building postcard is a great early view of "The Funny Place" on the new Steeplechase Pier in Atlantic City New Jersey which claimed to have the world's largest electric sign with 27,000 light bulbs advertising Chesterfield Cigarettes. George C. Tilyou developed the pier in 1908 and modeled from his amusement park of the same name at Coney Island in New York. Some of the better know rides available at the Atlantic City site were the Flying Chairs that swung out over the ocean, the Mexican Hat Bowl and the Sugar Bowl Slide. This is a great postcard showing the boardwalk and the basket chairs pushed by local young men. This postcard can be seen in my New Jersey listings along with 10,000 additional postcards on my website at Moody's Postcards.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Postcards featuring unusual buildings Part 9


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Today's unusual building postcard goes a little deeper into the subject with a view of the interior of the Y. M. C. A. in Omaha Nebraska. I feature the exterior of a lot of old buildings because of their beautiful or unusual design but this exterior is not that impressive.
So today I wanted to show you this interior to give you an idea of the beauty inside these older buildings. The 15 foot ceilings with massive wooden beams resting on 12 foot marble columns in cavernous rooms with chandeliers are not what you expect to see in a Y.M.C.A. in these days. Both of the postcards can be seen in my Nebraska listings along with 10,000 more postcards on my website at Moody's Postcards.

Friday, October 5, 2007

Postcards featuring unusual buildings Part 8


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"They don't make them like they use to" is a familiar saying now and our postcard of the day illustrates what they are talking about. Most of the schools today are one or two stories covered in red brick and look more like a big ranch style house than schools. The folks in Helena Montana knew how to build a school that could hold up under all kinds of weather, keep the kids safe and look beautiful. Check out the detail around the entrance and windows and the steep roof to keep that winter snow off the roof top. This circa 1909 school was a work of art and can be seen in my Montana listings along with 10,000 more postcards on my website at Moody's Postcards.