Showing posts with label Sold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sold. Show all posts
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Cabinet Photo of a Man with a very large Mustache - Minneapolis, Minnesota
I have no idea who this person is, but I'm pretty sure he's proud of his mustache. He's very clean cut, very well dressed, but has this wild mustache. It makes a visual statement, and is a mildly extreme take on late 19th century men's fashion.
The photographer's name is Burdick, and he was located at 301 Washington Avenue South, in Minneapolis. It's pretty close to downtown, and today the area seems to be parking garages and big buildings. I spent a couple of years in Minneapolis, and part of Washington Avenue was known for bars and live music, but I don't remember the addresses.
I wish I could say more about this photo, but really it's just guy with a huge mustache.
Update: Sold!
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
RPPC Helen Campbell, Girl Evangelist, 1927
This is a Real Photo Postcard (RPPC) of Helen Campbell. The inscription on front says "Yours in His service" the Evangelist Helen Campbell. Someone has written a date on back, "October 27, 1927". It has an AZO stampbox on back with 4 shaded in squares in each corner, which lends a little credence to the date written on back. This was a formal portrait, there were probably many, many copies made, and some were made into postcards.
This is a girl who definitely had her 15 minutes of fame. There is a site called www.girlevangelists.org, and Helen Campbell is listed there along with 100s of others. Apparently child evangelism was a big thing in the 1920s. There is a short article about her - she was born in 1915, started preaching at age 9, was associated with the Pentecostal movement, was active in the San Francisco & Oakland, CA areas at least, and apparently drew large crowds. I also found a couple of news articles and advertisements about her. When this picture was made she would have been 12 years old, and more or less at the height of her fame.
I have no idea what happened to her. I had never heard of her before I came across this postcard, and I don't know what she did in later life.
You're only a child prodigy when you're a child. At a certain age, you're not much different than anyone else who may be gifted in whatever area you're a prodigy in. I have a feeling this is what happened to Helen Campbell - at some point she was no longer a child evangelist, she was just an evangelist.
I could find nothing about her personal life, other than she traveled with her grandmother. It is even possible that she's still living, she'd be in her late 90s now.
Update: Sold!
Saturday, August 10, 2013
A Very Stylishly Dressed Woman, Nashville, Tenneessee
This is a late 19th (or very early 20th century) photo of a quite fashionably dressed woman. She's wearing a straw hat (I think it's straw anyway), a white blouse with a bow tie, a checkered vest, a jacket and holding gloves. One can infer without too much effort that's she's also wearing a corset, which was pretty standard for the time.
She is very stylishly dressed.
The photo was made by Thuss of Nashville, Tennessee, and there is no other identifying information. This was a professionally made studio photo, not a candid snapshot, and she was posed with her side to the camera. It's not an unheard of pose, but it is unusual & adds a bit of interest.
Update: Sold!
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
The Clover Leaf Picnic Club, 1895, Trenton, Missouri
So, 118 years ago members of a group call The Clover Leaf Picnic Club got together and had their picture taken, and an instant in time was captured and still survives. A bit faded maybe, but in the world of antique photos, it's alive and kicking.
I think there are 20 men and women in this photo, all look to be in their 20s or 30s. Everybody is pretty well dressed, much, much, MUCH more formally than people would be today. Especially for a picnic.
I've looked at each individual, with a magnifying glass no less, just to see fashion details and expressions. One person, the woman in the light blouse in the front row, is not looking at the camera. I wonder what she was looking at and was thinking about.
This a large photo, almost 8 X 10. The photographer was Smith of Trenton, Missouri. My attempts to find anything about The Clover Leaf Picnic Club remain aggravatingly illusive. Maybe I could contact the Trenton, Mo. Chamber of Commerce, see if they know anything. I suppose it was a social club, a means for young men & women to put themselves in close proximity to each other during the late Victorian era.
Update: Sold!
Saturday, July 20, 2013
U.S. Navy Sailor, Early 20th Century, Ralph V. Clark
This is a photo of Ralph V. Clark, a sailor in the US Navy. It was taken by R. Yamamoto of Yokohama, Japan.
I cannot date this precisely, but I believe it to be early 20th century, pre-WWI. It is interesting that the photographer information is displayed using the Latin alphabet - I imagine it was a busy port and they learned to cater to their visitors.
Someone has written on the back - "Ralph V. Clark, brother of Frank B. Clark". It's a nice example of what a Naval uniform looked like at the time.
I also have a photo of his brother Frank, same era, but it's not as good and there is no photographer information.
Sold!
Saturday, June 22, 2013
Willard D. Tripp, Former Union Officer in 29th Massachusetts Infantry, circa 1870s.
At first glance this is just a run of the mill Cabinet Photo - a man with mutton chops & a mustache, photographed by Woodward & Son in Taunton, Mass. And not only that, it's pretty faded.
On back, however, written in barely legible hard to read pencil and competing with other random scribbles for your attention is the following: "Capt. Willard D. Tripp", and "State House". I have no idea who may have written this, and I hope someone wasn't using the back of this photo just to jot down a note. My assumption is that the person in the photo is Willard Tripp, and he just became a little less anonymous. I suppose he'd be surprised that 82 years after his death, anybody noticed.
Willard Dean Tripp was born in 1838 & died in 1931, (92 years old) and is buried in Woburn, Massachusetts. (Find-a-grave has him buried in Mayflower Cemetery, Taunton, Mass). He served most of the civil war years as an officer in the 29th Massachusetts Infantry. A regimental history (from 1908) has his rank as Lt. Colonel, other documents refer to his rank as Captain. The 29th Mass was involved in several campaigns during the civil war, and apparently Captain Tripp rose in rank.
I can't find too much about his life after the war, but he was involved in state government. He was employed by the Massachusetts State Board of Lunacy and Charity in the late 1890s, then in the early 1900s, by the Division of Adult Poor, both happy sounding agencies. I'm not sure what positions he held, or what his responsibilities were.
This photo is probably from the 1870s-1880s.
Update: Sold!
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Cabinet Photo of a young Woman wearing a tall Hat & a tight Jacket
Usually I post photos or postcards here that are active listings for sale on my eBay site. I post them because I think they're interesting for some reason, I think it gets them a lot more looks and it may help with sales. I'm not a collector (for the moment), I buy these photos at various venues and I try to sell them for a profit. I'm not emotionally attached to any of them, though I do like them. I must enjoy buying and selling these photos, because, believe me, there has to be a way to make more money than this. (Like have a real job maybe? Well I had those for a long time, this is much more fun.) Anyway, this photo has already sold - it sold today and is off to the great state of Arkansas, which makes it an unusual post for me. I have nothing to gain by posting this (sales wise anyway), I just like it.
This is a detail of a cabinet photo. Its a young woman wearing a tallish, fairly elaborately decorated hat, a tight knitted jacket/sweater with a high collar, lots of buttons and a sprig of flowers. She's also wearing a ring of some sort - looks more like a class ring than a wedding ring. It is from the 1870s-1880s era, most likely. There is no photographer information or writing, so no clues as to who this was or where it was made.
The photos I post here usually don't do the real item justice, and that is very true in this case. The actual cabinet photo shows the details of the jacket much more sharply.
Sold!
Sunday, May 26, 2013
1898 Photo of a Man Tossed into the Air
This is an interesting photo of a person participating in a blanket toss, dated 1898. The photo shows a couple of buildings, a crowd of people, and a man in mid-air, holding on to his hat. A couple of people on the right side of the photo may be wearing military uniforms.
It is an albumen print with a cardboard mounting, and it is a bid faded. One thing that interests me is that it's 1898, and the photographer has managed to stop motion - the man in the air is obviously moving, and the shutter speed was apparently fast enough to capture it without any kind of blur.
The following information is written on back: "Some of the sporting camp life. Tossing in the blanket. Taken by Corporal Harmon. May 10, 1898." It was signed by H. B. Roderick. The corporal's name is hard to read - It could be Harman, or maybe even Herman.
Update: Sold!
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Civil war era CDV of a man wearing a military coat
This is a CDV portrait of a young man wearing what looks like a military uniform coat. If it is indeed a military uniform, that makes it an unusual acquisition, at least for us. There is photographer information on the back: E. M. Smith, 268 Main St., Buffalo. Also, someone wrote the following in pencil: "Mrs. Goodrich son". They wrote it exactly like that.
We believe we have a portrait of someone who was either serving (or had served) in the US Army during the time of civil war.
What we know: The CDV has the right look to be from the 1860s. The photographer, E. M. Smith, was at the address listed on the back in Buffalo, NY from 1861-1864, which corresponds to the era of the CDV and the dates of the civil war. The man is definitely of military age, and the coat has a military look to it.
What is conjecture: We're assuming his last name is Goodrich, but it may not be. If his father had died and his mother remarried, for example, he probably would not have the same name as his mother. I'm assuming the coat is military, but I'm no expert. If it is, he was most likely a private, because there is no rank insignia. NCOs would have patches on the sleeves, officers would have shoulder boards.
So, it is what it is. Personally, I think this guy was a soldier when this picture was taken. And I think his last name was probably Goodrich.
Update: Sold!
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Three Men in Top Hats, from Wenatchee, Washington, and Coldwater & Saginaw, Michigan
This is an interesting photo. There are 3 men, all dressed to the hilt, including gloves. They look to be in their 30s, the one sitting on the left maybe even a little younger. The clothing indicates they were doing well for themselves and had (or at least aspired to) some social standing.
What makes this really interesting though is what is written on the back.
The man sitting on the left is identified as F.W. Baker, Medical Arts Co., Wenatchee, Wash. There is also a PHC - 90 in the description, but I don't know what that means.
The man sitting on the right is identified as W.H. (Belva) Lockwood, 41 Hull Street, Coldwater, Mich.
Whoever wrote this was not sure who the man standing is, but it is either a Dr. Parkinson, or a Dr. A. S. Rogers, both from Saginaw, Mich. Whoever the man standing is, he was described as "now dead".
I have no idea who wrote this information, or when they wrote it.
So if you like to search out people in old photos and find their stories, there is a lot here to go on. Just a note - there was a Belva Lockwood who was woman involved with women's rights in the 19th century. I don't know if that Belva Lockwood has anything to do with the "Lockwood" in this photo.
This is a cropped portion of a cabinet card - the mounting is not in great shape, tho the photo itself is just fine. The phographer's name was Gibson, of Ann Arbor, and I'm assuming it is the Ann Arbor in Michigan, but the state is missing.
The person who wrote all that info neglected to put a date on it, but we're pretty sure this photo is from the 1890s.
Update: Sold!
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Black Americana Postcards - Detroit Publishing - Early 20th Century
These are two "Black Americana" postcards by Detroit Publishing, dating from the early 20th century.
The first shows a young woman with the caption "Polly in the Peanut Patch"; the second is an old man with a watermelon with the caption "The Melon-Cholic days have come, the gladdest of the year".
Black Americana is a postcard collecting category, and for some people that's what they collect. In the early 20th century (and in fact much later) most postcards depicting African Americans would be considered anything from mildly to blatantly racist by today's standards. Possibly by the standards of the time too, I don't know.
Anyway these are neat cards - not only because of the subject matter, but because of the publisher. I've written about Detroit Publishing before, so I won't repeat everything in this post, you can click on "Detroit Publishing" in the labels and find another post I wrote if you want more info about them. They used a special printing (or coloring) process which I think they leased from a European company and called "Phostint", and as a result their graphics are a higher quality than most other cards printed at the time. The coloring on "Polly's" card is very nice.
These are divided back cards, so that dates them to March 1907 or later - my feeling is that they are pre-WWI.
Update: Both Sold!
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Cabinet Photo Old Man With Elaborate Shawl, Grangeville, Idaho, 1890s
Sometimes I think we need an assistant to do nothing but figure out what things like this are. I expect someone like that might wish to be paid, so that rules out that possibility.
Obviously, the interesting thing in this cabinet photo is the shawl (or is it a vest?), but I want to mention something else first. Photographer info is listed as Hanson Photo, Grangeville, Idaho. The fact this is from Idaho makes it somewhat unique, at least in my experience. The vast majority of cabinet photos we have come from the north east & midwest USA. We have very few from southern states (states that are south of the Ohio River), and very few from areas west of Iowa and Missouri. Even California cabinet photos seem relatively rare. This is the very first card we have from Idaho, and it's an interesting one.
What is interesting about it, of course, is the shawl/vest this old fellow is wearing. We can't figure out what it is. It's draped around the neck (not really over the shoulders), and I don't know if extends down the man's back, or if it's just around his neck. Obviously we don't know what it's actual colors are. It has flower designs, and also cross key designs, which I can't help but think has some significance. I think there are three of the cross keys - one on each side of the shawl, and I believe one near the bottom which may (or may not) be holding the two sides together. There is something between the two sides of the shawl, right above the larger cross keys. Also, there is a medal or something hanging from underneath the shawl, which may have some significance, or may just be part of a pocket watch. I cannot make out any details on it. The shawl is fringed, with the two fringes on the ends hanging down lower.
We first thought this may be a religious garment, specifically Jewish, and we don't know that it isn't, but if it is, we couldn't find anything else like it.
Our next thought was that it was some kind of masonic (or masonic like) ceremonial garment, but again, we can't find anything to prove that.
What we do know, isn't much. We know that the picture was taken in Grangeville, Idaho, most likely in the 1890s. He's an old man, wearing a shawl with flower and key designs. It was taken by Hanson Photo. That's about it.
If anyone can enlighten us about this, we'd appreciate it!
Update: Sold!
Labels:
1890s,
Cabinet Photo,
Hanson Photo,
Idaho,
Man,
Photo,
Shawl,
Sold
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Bertha Stoneman and other Students, Cornell University, 1889
Every now and then we come across a photo that is out of the ordinary, and we think this is one. On the surface, it's just a slightly interesting photograph - a group of young people, looks like late teens to early 20s, nicely dressed in the much more formal fashions of the day. What makes this really interesting though, is what's written on back.
First, there was a name. The first name was obviously "Bertha", but I originally thought the last name was "Stoniman", but my wife looked at it and said it was "Stoneman". Following that is "Anti T.N.E. Picnic, C.U. 89", then below that (in what looks like different handwriting, but I'm no expert) "Five miles walk to Trumansburg May 25." Below that is the photographer's stamp "W.L. Hall, Trumansburg, N.Y."
So we googled "Bertha Stoneman" and found she was well known in Botany circles in the late 19th & early 20th centuries. She was born in western New York to a prominent family in 1866. She was a graduate of Cornell University, class of 1894, and received a Doctorate of Science in Botany in 1896. She joined the faculty of Wellington College in Cape Colony (South Africa) and apparently remained there for the rest of her life. In 1906 she authored a text book "Plants and their ways in South Africa". She served as president of Wellington College from 1928 to 1933, when she retired.
Armed with the knowledge that Bertha Stoneman attended Cornell University, and knowing that Trumansburg, NY is very close to Ithaca (google maps), and roughly knowing the age of the cabinet card based on the clothing of the subjects as well as the style of the photograph mounting, we concluded that "C.U. 89" meant Cornell University 1889. Once we figured that out, we determined that T.N.E. was probably Theta Nu Epsilon, a fraternity or secret society of some sort (I suppose of ill-repute). And this photograph was a perhaps a memento when at least10 people walked to Trumansburg and had a picnic along the way somewhere.
We've seen pictures of Bertha Stoneman when she was older, and we believe she is in the middle row on the extreme right in this photo.
If anyone knows anything else about this photo, feel free to let us know.
It is rare to find something like this where you can find out so much about the person. Without the writing on back, this would be just another somewhat interesting photograph.
This Cabinet photo was just in with a larger group we purchased - I wonder about it's travels. I wonder who owned it and how in the heck did it end up in our possession?
Update: Sold!
Monday, November 19, 2012
Bamforth & Co Postcards - After Marriage Her Husband Will be Different
This is an early 20th century postcard by Bamforth, a British company with a long history in the postcard & film business.
This card is poking fun at several things, but in the end it displays a succinct understanding of the human condition. (I mostly wrote the previous sentence to see if anyone was paying attention).
Most people who do not live together do not really know each other. If the only place you see someone is at work, or behind a counter, you don't really know them.
If you don't live with someone, you don't experience the undesirable sights, smells, stains and/or bodily fluids that can no longer be hidden. Humans are a biological species and as such are a messy sort, but that can be hidden or diminished UNTIL you live with someone.
After marriage, a husband (and wife) with almost certainly be different than he (or she) appeared before.
I suppose.
Anyway, that's what I think. Bamforth is a great company that produced thousands of postcards - many slightly (some more than slightly) risque. And a lot that are just a little odd.
Update: Sold!
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Comic - Cute Two Cylindered Run-about
This is an early 20th century artist/signed comic postcard that I've always kind of liked. The gal is dressed in what was probably very fashionable garb for the time - I'm sure the artist was satirizing it a bit. The smitten boy is using some slang of the time, comparing her two what was probably considered a nice little car. In fact there is a car in back ground, though I have no idea if it is a two cylindered run-about.
This is artist signed by "Seward", and it has been postally used, though unfortunately I could not read the postmark. It was addressed to a Mr. Albert Burch, of Kansas City, Missouri.
Update: Sold!
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Cabinet Photo of a Woman Reflected in a Mirror - 1890s
I like this photo for 3 reasons. First, we're pretty sure this is from the 1890s, and you don't see very many women with bare arms in he 1890s. Second, her profile is reflected in a mirror, and that is pretty neat. I've seen this before, but I'm pretty sure it's the only one I have. And 3rd, she has a very low cut neck line, in a era when most women had collars that went up to their chin.
In fact, she's showing a lot of skin at a time when usually all you saw skin wise of a woman (or a man, for that matter), was their hands and face.
I have another photo of this woman in the same dress, same necklace and everything, but in a more traditional pose.
The photo was taken by Garrison Bros. of Fort Dodge, Iowa. The Garrison brothers were Charles F. and Fred, and they had a studio in Fort Dodge in the 1890s - at least until 1896. So this photo is 116-120 years old, give or take.
I have no information on the woman, it would be interesting to know who she is and how she came to have such a photograph made.
UPDATE: Sold!
Friday, April 13, 2012
Meet Little Martha Sharples, 1892-1926.
This is little Martha Sharples - a bit larger normal Cabinet Photo with 3 views of the little girl.
I know this is Martha Sharples because it says so on the back - and it also gives her married name (Hess), and her parents names - David T. & Adeline Sharples. With that information you can find out a lot about this little girl.
She was born Nov 22, 1892 in Elgin (Kane County) Illinois, which means this photo was taken in 1897-98, give or take. She married a Henry Lawrence Hess in on April 26, 1916 in West Chester, Pennsylvania - their 96th anniversary is coming up. I have no idea of the events surrounding a move from Illinois to Pennsylvania, but apparently it happened. She had two children in the next couple of years, and then a daughter on May 28th, 1926. She died about a week later, June 2, 1926, at the age of 33 at Media (Delaware County) Pennsylvania. Although I can't say with 100% certainty, it seems pretty obvious she died from some complication arising from giving birth, probably excessive bleeding or infection. Both of her parents, David & Adeline Shaples, outlived her. I believe she was their only child.
I suspect there is no one alive now who ever met or knew Martha Sharples.
Martha's daughter, the one born in 1926, died in 2010, at the age of 84.
I look at these old pictures, and sometimes I find myself mourning for these people, who are for the most part long gone. I actually feel sad for them. In this photo, Martha is a little girl. She seems happy and well cared for, and I'm fairly certain no one expected her to die as a result of child birth. Everybody expected her to get married, have children, become a grandmother and so on. But fate had something else in store for Martha Sharples Hess. She never saw her children grow up.
Update: SOLD!
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Hammon, Mabel and Annie
Sometimes postcards are interesting because they show a slice of life - and this is one of those. It is more interesting because of the message on back, and because it is one of a series of postcards we have that were addressed to either Mable Norwood of Battle Creek, Michigan, or Hammon Marshall, sometimes of Battle Creek, other times of Detroit.
This one was addressed to Hammon Marshall from someone named Annie, and Annie is a little upset and none too subtle about what her intentions toward Hammon were. The text on back reads as follows: "I'm very sorry I did not see you when you were in BC. I heard today you came to see that Mabel N. You know what you promised me. I never thought that of you. You promised you would love me forever. But never mind. XXX Annie." Then in the margins she wrote "Let me hear from you some".
BC = Battle Creek, and "that Mabel N." is Mabel Norwood.
This is postmarked Battle Creek, Michigan, Feb 18, 1916.
96 years later, I can feel Annie's pain, sense of betrayal, and a bit of denial, very common emotions for someone in her position. Annie probably thought that she and Hammon Marshall would eventually be married, she'd keep house and raise a family, and it's possible Hammon mislead her. That's all conjecture on my part though.
Most likely Hammon had a decent job and was considered a catch.
But as it turns out Hammon Marshall married Mabel Norwood. Mabel was born in 1886 and died in 1974 - I believe Hammon died some years earlier. As far as I can tell they only had one child, a daughter, who was born in 1923 and lived until 2007. I expect there was an estate sale sometime after that point and that is how these series of postcards addressed to Mabel and Hammon (mostly from relatives) eventually ended up our possession.
This was a little poignant slice of life, a little bit of early 20th century romantic struggles, and Annie went through a very painful but ultimately very common experience. Most likely she found some one else, kept the house and raised a whole passel of children.
These events were very important in these people's lives - but everybody involved has lived their lives, raised their families, had their careers, did whatever they're going to do and have been dead for quite awhile now. These postcards and old photos we list & sell on eBay make me realize just how short life is. And they also make abundantly clear (to me at least) that these were real people with real emotions. Nothing abstact about them. There was real pain in the words written on the back of this postcard.
Update: Sold!
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Photograph of a Man with a very large Dog
This is an antique photo of a man with a very large dog, I think a Great Dane. It was photographed by Renshaw, of 2718 Girard Ave in Philadelphia. Writing on the back indicates the man is named Louis Haeckner, and that he was born in Germany.
We've listed a lot of photos of the Hackner's (sometimes spelled Haeckner) recently. Margaret Hackner, who I suppose was a daughter, married Oliver Phillips, and we have a lot of photos of that side of the family.
This is an early 20th century Gelatin Silver photograph, and there is heavy silvering on the photo, so heavy that if you tilt it slightly one way or another, the silvering is all you can see. Tilt it slightly toward you and you see a sharp photograph. I don't know the exact date of the photo, but it is probably 100 years old or close to it.
It is an unusual studio photo - a man with a huge dog in his lap - and the type that many people find interesting. At least I do.
Update: Sold!
Another Update - the dog may be a Presa Canario, not sure.
Friday, January 6, 2012
Little Girl Holding a Parasol
This is an 1880-90s era cabinet photo of a little girl holding a parasol, perhaps an umbrella. I looked to see what the difference was & I gather that all parasols are umbrellas, but not all umbrellas are parasols. A parasol, as its name implies, was used to shade a person from the sun. It was not water proof. Although I don't know for sure what she is holding, I think it is a parasol.
This is a studio photo, made to look like an outdoor setting. It could be a beach setting, but there's something that looks like a big tree behind her, so I don't know. And I love her expression.
I like this photo because of the girl's expression & the props in it. The photographers were Wardlaw & Learnen of Rochester, NY.
Update: Sold!
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