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

Wherever I May Roam

Wherever I May Roam pc1Wherever I May Roam pc2

Divided back, used postcard. Postmarked December 23, 1919 from Afton, New York. Publisher:  L.F. Pease, 258 Laurel St., Buffalo, New York, List no. 352.

Availability Status:  SOLD

“At morning, at night, or

at noon,

Wherever I may roam,

No matter how fair

is the country,

I am thinking often

of home. – L.T.H.”

A 1919 postcard showing the above beautiful verse by L.T.H. to the left of a wonderful colored drawing or painting of a rustic campfire, showing stew (we imagine) cooking in an iron pot over the open flame, and a white canvas tent nestled up to a tall evergreen. The artwork is really nice – note the contrast of the greens and browns and grays with the bright gold and orange of the fire, and the pale blue above the fire to show the rising steam. We’ll have to be on the lookout now for more postcards showing artists renderings of camp scenes, as although there are quite a number of old camping photos and Real Photo Postcards, there doesn’t seem to be many like this in the way of artwork.

This short poem is not showing up online, so we don’t know who LTH was, maybe someone who worked for the publisher, who was L.F. Pease, of Buffalo, New York. The publisher logo is a nice one, and once some organization can be done for logos, there were will be a category for them. The sender’s message is, thank goodness, a little out of the ordinary. They wrote:

“H. Harris[?]  Dec. 23, ’19. Dear Sister. Have read  ‘Christmas Eve on Beacon Hill’  and enjoyed it much but dout if any one else here can share it with me, not even[?] to the wall[?] each of us has  ‘it up down in the cellar.'[?] I gave Sylvia P. a box of stationary today. She is 8. I do not know what to get her cousin…?… for xmas.”  On the side of the note is written  “Thanks.”

The card is addressed to:  “Mrs. E. H. Beebe, R.F.D., Coudersport, PA.”

Mrs. E. H. Beebe is Estella Beebe on the 1920 Federal Census taken in Coudersport. She is 45 years old, born about 1875 in Pennsylvania. Her husband is Victor L. Beebe, born about 1873, Pennsylvania. Their children on this census are Sylvia, Clifford, and Rachel. Also living with the family is Edith Treat or Trent, a boarder, and Victor’s brother, Henry H. Beebe. The brothers are both carpenters, and Sylvia Beebe and Edith Trent/Treat or both working at a silk mill.

According to Ancestry.com family trees, Estella’s last name was Andrews before marriage, and siblings show a Henry Andrews, born in New York, about 1872. Perhaps his middle name was Harris? (per the writing at the top of the postcard) or perhaps the card is from one of Estella’s sisters who married?

Last but not least, Christmas Eve on Beacon Hill  was written by Richard Bowland Kimball, and is described in a 1920 edition Publisher’s Weekly as, “Christmas Eve on Beacon Hill by Richard B. Kimball. Decorations by Maurice E. Day. A charming story of how the old-time custom of candle-lighting and Christmas singing is enacted on Beacon Hill.”  This Christmas offering is actually a booklet rather than book, and can be found for sale online.

Sources:  Year: 1920; Census Place: Coudersport, Potter, Pennsylvania; Roll: T625_1648; Page: 13A; Enumeration District: 113; Image: 733 (Ancestry.com)

The Publisher’s Weekly Vol. 98, Part 2. R.R. Bowker Co., New York, November 6, 1920. p. 152. Web accessed November 8, 2014. (Google eBooks)

Roadside Birches

Roadside Birches pc1Roadside Birches pc2

A vintage postcard in black and white of a photo of a small stand of birch trees by the side of a winding one-lane dirt road. On the front is printed  “Roadside Birches – L.G. – 403.”  LG are possibly the photographer’s initials. On the back is printed  “Greetings from Mc Millan, Michigan.”  The stamp box shows  “Place Stamp Here”  and  “9B16.”

Curiously, there are two McMillan Townships in Michigan; both in the Upper Peninsula: McMillan Township, Luce County, located in the Eastern part of the U.P., population about 3,947 at the time of the 2000 census; and McMillan Township, Ontonagon County, located in the Western U.P. population about 601 at the time of the 2000 census. They are about a four hour drive from one another.

Divided back, unused postcard, circa 1950s – 1960s. Genuine Curteich – Chicago. “C.T. Photo-Cote” Post Card. Distributed by the L.L. Cook Company, Milwaukee.

Price:  $10.00

Sources:  McMillan Township, Luce County, Michigan. n.d. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McMillan_Township,_Luce_County,_Michigan (accessed November 8, 2014).

McMillan Township, Ontonagon County, Michigan. n.d. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McMillan_Township,_Ontonagon_County,_Michigan (accessed November 8, 2014).

For Thee I Pine

For Thee I Pine pc1For Thee I Pine pc2

Here’s a great postcard with the lovely play-on-words:  “For thee I pine, For thee I bal-sam.”

On the front of the card the sender wrote:  “But more so for the old white horse, Em.”  (Awww!) The card is addressed to:  “Miss Harriet Hopkins, Salinas, California”  and postmarked from Watsonville, California, on October 28, 1908.

Harriet Hopkins is possibly the Harriet that shows up in Watsonville on the Federal Census, as born West Virginia, about 1895; with parents Harry B., born Iowa about 1865 and Jane Hopkins, born England about 1875; and siblings Catherine, twin of Harriet; John, born West Virginia about 1898; and Mary, born California, about 1900. Nothing is showing in Salinas for either the 1900 or 1910. There may be a voter registration or city directory out there for 1908 but neither are showing online at this time. According to this census Harry was a farmer, but the family seems to have moved around a little. The 1900 shows they were in King City; Harry does not show up on this census, and Mary the youngest is four months old. Jane and the children are living with Samuel Hopkins (Harry’s dad), born Pennsylvania July 1825.

The West Virginia birth index shows Harriet and Catherine’s date of birth as March 15, 1895, born Winona, Fayette County, WV, and parent’s names H. F. Hopkins and Jane Ann Allport. (The middle initial is incorrect for the dad on this record.) Find A Grave shows quite a bit more about Harriet (married three times, and children) and other family info, and we could get very detailed here, but won’t due to having so many other great images to research and post. Bu what I like most about this beautiful card is the note on the front regarding the white horse, and the image it conjures up, of two friends, one has moved away, they have shared memories of a neighbor’s (or perhaps even the Hopkin’s) horse. (Your web author is crazy about animals in general, definitely about horses, but there is just something magical about a white horse. Memories of the white horse in Morgan Hill re first trip to California…of several white horses in Ireland…) In keeping with the spirit of the sender’s note, here’s a photo from the author’s collection.

Beautiful horse – Ireland, summer of 1999:

White Horse In Ireland p1

Divided back, embossed, used postcard. Postmarked October 28, 1908 from Watsonville, California. Publisher:  Newman Post Card Co., Los Angeles, California. Made in Germany. Series 4182.

Price:  $10.00

Sources:  Year: 1900; Census Place: King, Monterey, California; Roll: 94; Page: 4B; Enumeration District: 0007; FHL microfilm: 1240094. (Ancestry.com)

Year: 1910; Census Place: Watsonville, Santa Cruz, California; Roll: T624_107; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 0133; FHL microfilm: 1374120. (Ancestry.com)

Ancestry.com. West Virginia, Births Index, 1853-1969 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Find A Grave Memorial# 114666693. Web accessed November 7, 2014. (Findagrave.com)

Girl In Warm Coat

Girl In Warm Coat p1

Antique photo, circa 1890s – 1910.  Size:  3 and 3/4 x 6 and 3/4″

Price:  $7.00

An old photo, perhaps from the 1890s or early 1900s showing a young girl wearing a warm-looking winter coat, gloves, and hat. Our subject looks to be maybe eight to ten or eleven years old, is posed standing at an angle to the camera, with her head turned a little toward the photographer but without a direct gaze. She has a bit of a thoughtful look, a little off to one side. In general, for photographing people the angled pose is considered to be flattering, so this photo may have been taken by a professional photographer, or at least someone who knew a little about photography. And it appears to have been taken outside if what we are seeing in the background are leaves, but it’s dark and hard to discern. We can’t make out her legs as whatever she is wearing there blends in. The coat is a light color, of a plush material, falling maybe at or just above the knee, and has a somewhat wide, flat-laid collar. The coat must be fastened from the inside as the front shows three braided rope decorations where the buttons or fasteners would normally be. Her hat is another story altogether, and looks like something normally worn in spring or summer. Maybe this photo was taken at Eastertime or for an occasion like a confirmation or first communion. But anyway, the hat is a pillbox type with a large decorative flower off to the side. The girl’s blond hair is pulled back by a large white or light-colored bow.

This photo has the look of another on this website under the title of  “Mystery Building”  just in the feel of the photographic paper and the condition, and this is the main reason why I think this photo may be from around the turn of the century. Searching online for similar coats and hats is not yielding any definite clues at this time.

Incidentally, the origin of the word “plush” is from the French peluche. From Wikipedia, the description for plush is  “a textile having a cut nap or pile, the same as fustian or velvet”  and was originally made from mohair or worsted yarn.

Source:  Plush. n.d. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plush. (accessed November 6, 2014).

Country Girl

Country Girl pc1Country Girl pc2

Here’s a Real Photo Postcard of a beautiful young woman posing in a countryside setting on a sunny day. I know, the word beautiful is used a lot here at Laurel Cottage, but after all aren’t all women beautiful? But this girl really has a lovely expression, and though this photo is not traceable since there is no name, it was too great to pass up. (Wish we could buy them all.) Was she on her way out to breakfast or brunch with family, or to church, or out with her friends or for an outing with her fiancee or husband? It’s always fun and interesting to see what impressions we get. But anyway, in the background we see a fence made of wood and probably chicken wire, a building of some type and what looks to be a willow tree. We get the feeling that the time of year is autumn or early spring. Our subject’s skirt and matching jacket appear to be made of wool, and the skirt’s hemline appears at mid-calf. A white lace collar is layered over the jacket lapels, and we see that the young woman wears a heart-shaped pendant on a short choker-type chain. Her darker gloves appear to be made of leather; she wears high-button leather boots, and a wide-brimmed white or pale-colored hat with a dark border on the brim. A white or pastel draw-string purse with small pom-poms at the end of the draw-strings, dangles at her side.

The back of this divided back Real Photo Postcard shows “Correspondence Here” and “For Address Only” and has no stamp box. My best guess at this time is that this postcard is from the mid-1910s.

Divided back, Real Photo Postcard, unused. Circa mid-1910s.

Price:  $10.00

Bachelor’s Permit

Bachelors Permit ac1

The third and last in this miniseries from the Exhibit Supply Company:  A priceless bachelor’s permit allowing the bearer to among other things, “…make love with one hand on his pulse and his eye on the clock and his pocketbook.”  Signed by I.M. Weak (secretary) and Heesa Liar (recorder).

Vintage arcade card from the Exhibit Supply Company, Chicago. Circa 1944.  Size:  5 and 5/16 x 3 and 5/16″

Price:  $10.00

Guarantee Of Protection

Guarantee Of Protection ac1

The second in a short series from the Exhibit Supply Company that was based out of Chicago:  A man’s Guarantee of Protection, in the event that he answers his wife or sweetheart truthfully. This guarantee was good for 5 minutes and signed by Too Bad (secretary) and Outa Luck (president). This card has a little bit of dried glue or some type of substance on the front, so it’s condition is not quite as good as the other two.

Vintage arcade card from the Exhibit Supply Company, Chicago. Circa 1944.  Size:  5 and 5/16 x 3 and 5/16″

Price:  $8.00

Whose Your Whoosis?

Whose Your Whoosis

The first of three funny ones from the Chicago-based Exhibit Supply Company. These types of cards were available out of arcade games, and this one is a prediction regarding the card receiver’s future love, showing a caricature of a big shot smoking a cigar, and wearing a carnation. (But a likeable looking big shot.) The “W” at the bottom stands for women, and there was another whole set for men. The card offers this possible interpretation of the future:

“You may fall in love with a big promoter who will be the Whoosis who says: – ‘If I went broke I would start all over again by going into the pretzel business. And if the pretzel business failed, I would manufacture corsets. If that failed, I would go into the hair pin manufacturing business. And if that failed, I would go into the bustle business.’ “

Vintage arcade card from the Exhibit Supply Company, Chicago, 1946.  Size:  3 and 1/4 x 5 and 5/16″

Price: $10.00

Woman With Book

Woman With Book pc1 Woman With Book pc2

Here’s a Real Photo Postcard from probably the 1920s of a woman sitting in a wooden chair, holding a large, leather bound book. She wears her hair in the bobbed, waved fashion of the day, a pearl necklace, and a cap-sleeved dress with a drop-waist that has a  beautiful lace panel running down the center from neck to hemline. The dress is pleated below the waist. She looks to be in her late 30s or early to mid-40s and gazes directly at the camera. We wonder what she was thinking….what the rest of her day consisted of. The book in her lap is a bit of a mystery. The cover is in Spanish and reads as:  “Metodo Nacional …[?]…Corte Parisien. Sistema “Macha” por Francisca M[?]…”  translating as “National Method. Parisian Court. ‘Macha’ System by Francisca M….” possibly Francisca Macha as we see a capital M there, and searching online shows that Macha is a last name. Exactly what subject this title refers to is unknown, but the book makes a good prop; something for the subject to hold, thus lending a more natural and relaxed look. We can see that this photo was taken outside, and that the photographer draped a canvas backdrop behind the subject. The fact that the book is in Spanish could be a clue to the woman’s ancestry, but then again it might just be a book that the photographer carried with him (well, and therefor a possible clue to his ancestry.)

Divided back, unused Real Photo Postcard. Circa 1920s. NOKO stamp box.

Price:  $8.00

Ethel O. (Shore) Cockey

Ethel Shore Cockey p1

 

A beautiful photo of a beautiful lady, Ethel Olive (Shore) Cockey:

According to the obituary information posted on Find A Grave, Ethel O. Shore was born March 5, 1905 in Arlington, Kansas, and died June 8, 1969 in Dodge City, Kansas. She married William Powell Cockey, Jr. on June 6, 1928. She worked as a nurse’s aid, was a member of the First Christian Church in Dodge City, the American Legion Auxiliary, and the Ford County Heart Association Council, and she worked with the Red Cross.

Ethel would have been 23 when she married, and this photo could have been taken either before or after her marriage,  and it’s probably from the late 1920s or early ’30s. The background is interesting. It looks like she was posed before a piece of artwork that was drawn to have the viewer looking out a paned window to an outdoor scene, but is that a tree on the left or is it water at a shoreline? If you look closely at the photo you’ll notice that Ethel’s eyelashes were enhanced by, it would seem, the same person that wrote her name at the top. Perhaps this was the photo artist but whoever it was did a good job.

Ethel Olive Shore is on the 1910 Federal Census taken in Arlington, Kansas with her parents Victor H. and Ella M. Shore. Victor’s occupation shows here as Foreman for a “Section Gang” and this is likely referring to railroad work, as his WWI draft registration card shows Victor Hugo Shore, Section Foreman for the A.T. & S.F. Railway Co. (Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe) in St. John, KS. The 1920 census taken in St. John shows this family with an additional member, Myrtle, age 9, and a boarder, Jessie Smiley.

Size:  About 3 and 1/4 x 5″

Old photo, circa late 1920s or early 1930s.

Price:  $20.00

Sources:  Find A Grave memorial 107614561. Web accessed October 27, 2014. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=107614561&ref=acom. (Findagrave.com)

“United States Census, 1910,” index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M2ZW-TGX : accessed 27 Oct 2014), Ethel Olive Shore in household of Victor H Shore, Arlington, Reno, Kansas, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 146, sheet 11B, family 77, NARA microfilm publication T624, FHL microfilm 1374466.

“United States World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918”, index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K66V-YHD : accessed 27 Oct 2014), Victor Hugo Shore, 1917-1918.

“United States Census, 1920,” index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MFXG-W25 : accessed 27 Oct 2014), Victor H Shore, St John, Stafford, Kansas, United States; citing sheet 7A, family 62, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1820552.