Genealogy Services, Old Photos, Postcards, Trade Cards, Etc.

Easter Greetings From Maebelle McFall

Set of two, divided back postcards. Unused, with writing, dated 1925. Publisher:  Wolf & Co., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Series 461.

Price for the pair:  $10.00

Bunny checking his look in the mirror….There don’t seem to be too many Easter-bunny-looking-in-mirror cards that had been dreamed up and printed, as we discovered after Googling for images. And we’re seeing this one, on another site, attributed to artist Ellen Clapsaddle. So that’s a possibility for both of these cards, though they are both unsigned by the artist, so it’s hard to say, for sure. Clapsaddle was a well-known illustrator for publisher Wolf & Co., also called Wolf Co. or referred to as the Wolf brothers. But both of these cards were sent by Miss Maebelle McFall to her cousins Lowell and “Jr.” and are part of The Alice Ellison Collection on this website.

“Jr” and Lowell are George Louis Mugridge and Lowell J. Mugridge, born 1923 and 1924 respectively. Maebelle McFall, born in Colorado in 1912, is the daughter of Jennie May Ellison and Ernest V. Pearsall McFall (biological name Pearsall, stepfather’s name McFall). The boys are her cousins on her mother’s side.

“Dear Little Cousin Jr. I hope the bunnies stope in to see you and bring lots of eggs. I know you are an afful cute boy and I would like to see you. Your Loving Cousin Maebelle McFall   1925  (Lots of xxx and ooo)”

Baskets of eggs….and a bun that seems to minding the store…

“Lowell, I hope the bunnies brings lots of Easter eggs to you. I hope your big enough to walk so you can hunt your Easter eggs. Lot of Love from your cousin Maebelle McFall   1925   Plenty of ooo and xxx for Lowell” 

Easter Greetings To Betty Dow

Divided back, embossed postcard. Postmarked April 15, 1911 from Oakland, California. Number or series 626.

Price:  $10.00

Heehee, what an expression on this guy! Easter bun on his way (with a handkerchief full of painted eggs and artist’s palette over his shoulder) to your house in 2020 and that of Betty Dow back in 1911.

Betty’s address was found in city directories under Wallace H. Dow, 82 Mesa Ave, Piedmont, CA. The 1910 Federal Census for Piedmont shows Wallace as head of household and vice president of the Dow Pump Co., wife Helen, children Elizabeth age 7, Wallace A., age 5, all native to California, and their Portuguese maid Marama de Azavedo, age 20. So, this postcard, signed from Lloyd and Herbert, was sent to Betty when she was about 7 years old. Betty went on to marry Frederick Cooper Green in 1924 in Alameda, CA. Their marriage certificate show’s Betty’s mother’s maiden name was Crocker.

Sources:  Polk-Husted Directory Co.’s Husted Oakland, Berkeley and Alameda Directory 1910, p. 318. Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1822-1995.

Year: 1910; Census Place: Oakland, Alameda, California; Roll: T624_72; Page: 6B; Enumeration District: 0151; FHL microfilm: 1374085. (Ancestry.com).

Ancestry.com. California, Marriage Records from Select Counties, 1850-1941.

Thunderbird Park, Vancouver Island, 1958

Photo, snapshot with white border, June 1958, Vancouver Island, BC

Price:  $5.00       Size:  About 3 and 1/2 x 3 and 1/2″

Tourists in June 1958 posing at the foot of a totem pole (not sure if this particular one is still there) and in front of the Mungo Martin House which was built in 1953.

Mungo Martin. n.d. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mungo_Martin. (accessed March 14, 2020).

1950 Victoria 10th International Salon of Photography

Print of notice of photography show, October 1950.

Price:  $15.00            Size:  4 and 1/8 x 4 and 3/4″

A third in a short totem pole theme, an ad for the 10th International Salon of Photography that was probably one of many that were printed and handed out around town, at the event, or both. According to the article below, from The Victoria Daily Times, the show had both a color and black and white section. The color slide show included  “exhibits of photographers from many parts of the world”  featured 187 slides and was held in the Esquimalt Community Hall on Sturdee St., in Esquimalt Township, British Colombia.

And on the back of the ad there appears the following, a signature? which was darkened in Photoshop. Was it from anyone famous in the photography world? (Just kidding…..or maybe not.)

Source:  ” Color Photo Exhibit.”  The Victoria Daily Times. (Victoria, British Columbia) October 28, 1950. Saturday, p. 22. (Newspapers.com)

Afraid To Go Near It

Divided back, unused postcard. Artist:  William Standing. Publisher:  Dennis Delger. 1948. Western Stationery Co., Yachats, Oregon.

Price:  $7.00

“Me Too But I’m Afraid To Go Near It.”

A humorous card of a totem pole and two dogs….taken from the original etching by Indian artist, William Standing (1904 – 1951).

Source:  William Standing. n.d. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Standing (accessed March 1, 2020.).

Totems At Ketchikan Ball Park

Old photo, circa 1930s, white border.

Price:  $10.00

Yes, the focus is not great, we’ll agree with whoever it was that wrote the description on the back. There are a few commercial photos (a good thing, for sure!) that we found online, that are much better, and actually show the rest of the poles that were standing to our left as we gaze into the shot. But there’s always something about an image from someone’s personal camera, well for one thing, because they’re unique (excepting the person made duplicates, of course) and probably also because we get a sense of being with that one individual as they took the photo, so it seems more personal.

Screen shot below right, from a Google search shows one such commercial photo, for sale on eBay, as of our post going up today. The photographer’s surname was Schallerer.

But the curious thing (to anyone who may not know the history of the city) is that there was a baseball field at the park that was comprised of part of the beach, which was underwater when the tide was in. We’re not sure where the ball field was in relation to the totems, but apparently the tide flats were the best place (at the time) to host games, due to the topography of the area.

Below, a January 1932 clipping from a Bristol, Tennessee newspaper regarding the end of the tide-flats ball field. And we appreciate the unknown journalist’s turn of a phrase, conjuring images of ballplayers that had been……

Cavorting in water up to their knees

Sources:  Google.com screen shot result for search under “old photos by Schallerer of Ketchikan.” March 1, 2020.

“Alaska ‘Tide’ Ball Park to Wet No More Players.”  The Bristol Herald Courier. (Bristol, TN). January 2, 1932. Saturday, p. 5. (Newspapers.com).

Allen, June. “100 Years of Baseball in Ketchikan!” Stories in the News. April 26, 2003, Saturday 12:30 a.m. http://www.sitnews.net/JuneAllen/Baseball/042603_100_years.html. Accessed March 1, 2020.

http://www.sitnews.net/JuneAllen/Baseball/042603_100_years.html

Alaska Mining Camp In Winter

Divided back postcard, unused. Publisher:  Edward H. Mitchell, San Francisco, California. Printed in the United States. Series or number 1416. Circa 1910s.

Price:  $5.00

I had to check the title on this one, yes, Alaska Mining Camp (an undisclosed mining camp in Alaska) is correct, rather than “Alaskan” Mining Camp. I thought the original title printed on the card made it sound like there is a town called Winter, in Alaska, which per a quick web search, there is not. This card is a segue from the snow in the previous ice skater card, for which the winter theme got interrupted by a post about the ice skater card’s publisher. So, back to winter, briefly, before linking this Alaska card to totem poles in AK, coming up next. If none of this makes sense 🙂 it doesn’t matter, it’s only that I like to find some kind of link from one post to the next, just for fun.

And if this one reminds you of a song, the most obvious may be….“Big Sam left Seattle in the year of ninety-two, With George Pratt his partner and brother Billy too…..”  You know it (a great one!). Anyway, it’s not 1892 at the time of this postcard, but probably more like the 1910s. And the publisher, San Francisco native Edward H. Mitchell (1867 – 1932) was a major West Coast name in postcard publishing. For some interesting insight into the souvenir card business in year 1917, see Mitchell’s letter written in opposition to the proposed rate hike for postage at that time. (The increase to 2 cents went into effect November 2, 1917 and was changed back to one cent July 1, 1919.)

Sources:  Horton, Johnny;Franks, Tilman. “North to Alaska.” 1960.

“Letter from Edward H. Mitchell, Publisher of Souvenir Post Cards, San Francisco, Cal.” Revenue to Defray War Expenses:  Hearings and Briefs…on H.R. 4280. U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington, DC. 1917. (Google.com books).

History of United States Postal Rates. n.d. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_United_States_postage_rates (accessed February 1, 2020).

P. F. Volland & Co. Publisher

P. F. Volland & Co. or P. F. Volland Co., in their heyday, was one of the leading publishers in the United States and was known especially for their children’s  books, as well as greeting cards, postcards, calendars, framed mottos and other ephemera. The company was founded in 1908 and operated until the late 1950s, after having merged with the Gerlach Barklow Company in the mid-1920s.

“The Mark of Originality”

The above image is the publisher logo from the postcard reverse of our prior post. P. F. Volland & Co. was founded by Paul F. Volland in 1908 and later just went under P. F. Volland Co. They were headquartered in Chicago and later added branches in other cities including New York and Toronto. At first glance the logo design might seem somewhat random (especially when viewed as a whole including the Christmas tree on the card reverse shown below) but no, there’s the V for Volland and inside the V, the letter P, and then the ampersand inside the P, and the “Co” just underneath the P, and then more subtle is the F which is incorporated into the P. There’s two ways you could view the F – either with the line above the ampersand being the horizontal top line, or that of its shorter horizontal line……But, so much for that detailed, probably unnecessary 😉 breakdown of the publisher’s mark.

So, there’s already quite a bit online for this publisher including this Wikipedia entry. Check out the very long list (we counted 165) of writers and artists who, at one time, had contributed to the company, including big names like Frank L. Baum, Lewis Carroll, Robert Louis Stevenson and Johnny Gruelle (creator of Raggedy Ann and Andy). (Interesting to find this list immediately after musing on the unknown artist of said prior post.)

Below, an early mention from 1909 that appeared in the Lincoln Journal Star (Lincoln, NE). The Volland offices were in the Monroe Building at 100 S. Michigan Ave. before moving in 1916 to the Garland Building at 58 E. Washington St., in Chicago.

A short bio

Paul Frederick Volland was born in Leipzig, Stadtkreis Leipzig, Germany, April 24, 1875, the son of Gustav Volland. He married Laura Marie Gordon November 2, 1898 in Rock Island County, IL, and they had a son, Gordon Byron Volland, born October 1899. The couple later divorced and Volland married Gladys Couch. They had two daughters, Dorothy Virginia Volland and Gladys D. Volland. Paul and Gladys were said to have been divorced at the time that Paul was shot and killed, May 5, 1919, in his office in Chicago by Mrs. Vera Trepagnier, the result of a business dispute with Volland involving a deal over a miniature heirloom painting of George Washington. One of the silent partners and company executives, Frederick J. Clampitt, took over the business after Volland’s death. The P. F. Volland Co. merged with the Gerlach Barklow Co. around 1926 (accounts vary) and moved offices to Joliet, Illinois.

Photo of Paul F. Volland that appeared in The Boston Globe, May 10, 1919, in the article regarding his death.

1926 merger and move article

Appearing below, a clipping from the Daily Republican-Register (Mount Carmel, IL) January 26, 1926. (That’s a typo on “Voll.”)

Son, Gordon Volland hired by Buzza

P. F. Volland’s son, Gordon B. Volland, became a publisher like his father. City directories show he was in New York in 1925 and Joliet Illinois in 1927 (possibly with the P. F. Volland Co. in both locations) before being hired as the head of the juvenile book publishing department, for the Buzza Company in Minneapolis. The following clipping is from The Minneapolis Morning Tribune, May 20, 1927. (However, we’ll stop here in following Gordan’s career).

Sources:  P. F. Volland Co. n.d. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._F._Volland_Company#Authors_and_illustrators_of_the_P.F._Volland_Co. (accessed January 11, 2020).

Ancestry.com. Illinois, Deaths and Stillbirths Index, 1916-1947 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Virginia Department of Health; Richmond, Virginia; Virginia, Marriages, 1936-2014; Roll: 101168004

Ancestry.com. Illinois, Compiled Marriages, 1851-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.

Year: 1920; Census Place: Chicago Ward 25, Cook (Chicago), Illinois; Roll: T625_342; Page: 7B; Enumeration District: 1477.

Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 05 January 2020), memorial page for Paul Frederick Volland (24 Apr 1875–5 May 1919), Find A Grave Memorial no. 174313703, citing Rosehill Cemetery and Mausoleum, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA ; Maintained by K Gillen (contributor 47561859) .
“Artistic Publications.” Lincoln Journal Star, November 15, 1909. p. 16. (Newspapers.com).
“Raggedy Ann is moving to Joliet.” Daily Republican-Register (Mount Carmel, IL) January 26, 1926. (Newspapers.com).
The Price & Lee Co.’s Montclair NJ’s city directory 1925. Entry for “Gordon B. Vollend.” NY publisher. p. 457. Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1822-1995.
R. L. Polk & Co.’s Joliet City Directory 1927. Entry for Gordon B. Volland. p. 442. Ancestry.com. U.S. City Directories, 1822-1995.
“Buzza to Open Juvenile Book Industry Here.” The Minneapolis Morning Tribune, May 20, 1927. Friday, p. 1. (Newspapers.com).

Holiday Ice Skater

Divided back, unused postcard. Publisher:  P. F. Volland & Co., Chicago and New York. Copyright 1917.

Price:  $7.00

“To extend

the greetings of the season

and to wish you

a happy and prosperous

New Year.”

An illustration of a very stylishly dressed young lady, ice skating amidst whirling snow. You wonder who the artist was and whether we have, unbeknownst to us, seen their work before. Because this is such a nice one, with a magical quality to it, and I hope the artist was happy with their work (and in general), because he or she has brought us happiness!

The publisher, P. F. Volland & Co. was founded by Paul Frederick Volland.

Source:  P. F. Volland. n.d. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._F._Volland_Company (accessed January 5, 2020).

With Affectionate Regard

Divided back, unused postcard. Circa 1910 – 1920s. Series or number W1017. Publisher unknown. Printed in the U.S.A.

Price:  $3.00

“I send you my New Year greetings on this tiny little card.

They are prompted not by custom, but affectionate regard.”

The clarity is not the greatest on this postcard, but still, it’s a very cute illustration……and dig those duds on the gent!