Divided back, unused postcard. Publisher unknown. Series or number 300B. Circa 1920s – 1930s.
Price: $2.00
“To Your Folks and You.
My heart is quite crowded with wished most true,
For a happy Thanksgiving for your folks and you.”

Photo, white border, WWII.
Price: $5.00 Size: About 5 x 3 and 1/4″
No i.d. on the back for this U. S. army man during WWII, who was enjoying a bottle of soda pop when he posed for the picture. The snapshot was found loose in a bin full of others, at an antique mall. And we’re assuming he was army due to the stamp on the back of the photo which shows: “Passed for publication, U. S. Army press censor 62801, U. S. E. C.” Maybe one of our readers can give us more information. Do the initials U. S. E. C. stand for United States East Coast and is the number 62801 the censor’s i.d. number?
Source: “What does USEC stand for?” https://www.acronymfinder.com/United-States-East-Coast-(USEC).html. (accessed November 12, 2018).
Photo, white border. Circa 1914 – 1918.
Price: $2.00 Size: 3 and 3/16 x 4 and 4/16″
For Veteran’s Day…..though a day late
Even though this snapshot is very blurry, I still like it. There’s no identifying info on the back for this handsome couple. (Love the woman’s skirt – row upon row of ruffles). But what comes to mind? The word precarious, for love during wartime. In this case the era was The Great War, as it was then called. But, in contradiction to that first thought, the word enduring. Love is forever.
Divided back, unused postcard. Publisher: Dawkes & Partridge, 29 High Street, Wells. Number 25.
Price: $2.00
A Dawkes & Partridge postcard with the description:
“Swans Ringing The Bell. The picturesque Moat which surrounds Bishop’s Palace, at Wells, is noted for its beautiful Swans. A unique and interesting habit of these Swans is to ring, when hungry, for food; a bell being placed beneath the window from which the food is thrown. The Swans were first taught to ring the bell by Miss Eden, daughter of Lord Auekland, Bishop of Bath & Wells, A. D. 1854 – 69.”
The swan tradition has continued till the present day, though a recent article from the BBC dated October 24, 2018 reported that the resident swan and her brood has re-located.
Source: “Bell-ringing swan Wynn leaves The Bishop’s Palace.” https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-somerset-45967935 (accessed November 11, 2018).
Divided back, Real Photo Postcard. Circa 1930s – 1950s. Publisher: A. E. Wrate, Lumley Rd., P. O. Skegness.
Price: $10.00
A commercial-type Real Photo Postcard, that would have been a good one to use for Halloween, but just to continue with a couple more from England before moving on to Veteran’s Day….and we’re guessing on the date, maybe from the 1930s through 1950s. Note the blurriness around the outer edges of the photo (for some reason). We’re guessing that A. E. Wrate is Alfred Ernest Wrate, born in 1916, son of Alfred Wrate and Amelia Elizabeth (Moody) Wrate, but all three family members are listed in census records as being in the photography business. Wrate’s was also known for its “walking pictures.” See Go Home on a Postcard‘s entry “Wrates – Skegness.”
St. Mary’s Church, located in Hogsthorpe, a small village of the East Lindsey district in Lincolnshire county, dates originally from the 12th century.
Sources: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1911. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA), 1911. (Ancestry.com).
The National Archives; Kew, London, England; 1939 Register; Reference: RG 101/6452F.(Ancestry.com).
Ancestry.com. England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916-2007.
FreeBMD. England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1837-1915. (Ancestry.com).
“Wrates – Skegness.” Go Home on a Postcard. https://gohomeonapostcard.wordpress.com/companies/wrates-skegness/ (accessed November 11, 2018).
Hogsthorpe. n.d. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogsthorpe (accessed November 11, 2018).
Photo, London, England. April 25, 1953.
Price: $2.00 Size: 2 and 1/4 x 3 and 1/4″
Posing next to a bed of tulips is a beautiful young woman, St. James Park, London, England, April 25, 1953. What was crossed off on the back? I’ve looked with a magnifying glass and enlarged the scanned image but am unable to tell.
Photo, white border. Liverpool, England, 1945. Velox (Kodak) photographic paper.
Price: $4.00 Size: About 3 and 1/8 x 2 and 1/8″
Beauty in the wheat fields….
Aileen Johnston, a stunner with a beautiful smile, posing somewhere outside of Liverpool, England.This photo was taken in 1945, right at the end of WWII, maybe in August or September, according to the wheat harvest. It’s always so nice (unusual!) to have a name, date and a location on the back of an old snapshot.
Photo, white border. Circa 1910s – 1920s
Price: $4.00 Size: 5 and 7/8 x 3 and 1/2″
Something about this photograph reminds me of England but it could just as likely have been taken elsewhere; even so, we’re including it here in our short trip to that country, starting with the prior post. And there are no identifying markings on the back. What was the occasion? It would probably tell us on the cards two of the kids are holding. Our best guess is maybe First Communion, but certainly the occasion was a very special one. We can’t see the details too well in the girls’ white dresses but the veils stand out, lovely and each one different. The boys are in suits and ties; those are Knickerbocker suits on the two on the left. And all the kids are holding carnations with ferns.
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