A very 50's looking postcard for the 100 anniversary of
Rike's in Dayton , Ohio . By the late 1980's sections of the store were rented to other businesses and some floors formerly used for retail
sales were totally abandoned. The store was closed in 1992 and stood more or
less empty until the entire half-city block complex was demolished by implosion
in 1999. You can watch that implosion here !
A sometimes rambling blog about my postcard collection, Mostly vintage, some new, a bunch of linens with a touch of chrome.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
"Tunnel Vision"
In spite of the Turnpike
Commission dubbing the new road "The World's Greatest Highway ", the Turnpike was
popularly known as the "Tunnel
Highway ". Many souvenirs promoted the
original stretch's seven tunnels through Pennsylvania 's
Appalachian Mountains . These tunnels, from
east to west, bored through Blue Mountain , Kittatinny
Mountain , Tuscarora
Mountain , Sideling Hill, Ray's Hill, Allegheny Mountain , and Laurel Hill.
Above: The Bankhead Tunnel
runs underneath the Mobile River in Alabama .
The tunnel was built in sections and floated to the proper positions, then
sunk. Each section was sunk next to the previous section and joined underwater. Only
passenger cars and pickup trucks are still allowed to travel through the
tunnel, as it is very narrow.
Construction of the Liberty Tunnels began in 1919. The boring of the 5889 foot
tubes was completed in 1922. When the Liberty Tunnels were opened to traffic in
1924, they were considered an engineering marvel. The nearly two-mile span was
the longest tunnel in the country at that time.
Friday, September 7, 2012
It's Wonderful at the Whitcomb!
This card makes me feel good! I don’t know if it’s the bright colors, the cartoonish figures or seeing all of the fun that one could have there, but it makes me smile!
Not surprisingly, the Whitcomb became a gathering place for an A-list of celebrities, among them Joe DiMaggio, Eleanor Roosevelt among others.
Unfortunately, a combination of factors, including the Depression, WWII and the end of steamship passenger service in the latter part of the 1940s, caused the hotel to hit a downward spiral from which it never fully recovered.
Beset by hard times, the Whitcomb closed its doors as a hotel for good in November, 1966. The Whitcomb was reopened after extensive renovations as a retirement residence on March 15, 1973.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Monday, September 3, 2012
Fourche River Lumber Company, Arkansas, 1906
The saw mill was built in 1900 on
the banks of the Fourche and in 1902 the Fourche River Lumber Company was in operation. Residents emboldened by the power of the mills
petitioned to change the name from Esau to Bigelow (N.P. Bigelow was the president of Fourche Lumber) in
1914.
The mills heyday ended with the
closure of the Fourche River Lumber Company in 1921. Hundreds of families
were suddenly left with no source of income and were forced to move to new
lumber camps. Today,
Bigelow has few commercial businesses and a much smaller population (pop.329) than that
of the turn of the century.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Sloppy Joe's, Havana, Cuba
I love the design on this card. The ships sailing to Habana (Habana on the front and Havana on the back) from all points N. S, E and W!
Sloppy Joe's was a Havana
bar in the 30's. The bar got this name because the place in principle was a
mess and the sandwich served there was made of "ropa vieja", Spanish for old clothes (shredded flank steak in a tomato based sauce). The
sandwich was known as a Sloppy Joe and it was also served in many variants, in
several parts of the world.
One of the frequent patrons was Ernest Hemingway. The
tourists that visited Havana during that time,
mostly North Americans, preferred two places: Sloppy Joe's Bar, and the
beautiful race horse track of Havana
controlled by Meyer Lansky's mafia.
In 1959, after the Cuban revolution, the mythical Sloppy Joe'
s Bar was closed and abandoned.
Monday, August 27, 2012
The Pipe of Peace
This card was in a postcard album I purchased many years ago. The album belonged to the family of U.S. Ambassador to Austria-Hungary, Richard C. Kerens. I'm not sure what the reference to "The Judge" is. It's handwritten on the card and perhaps is an inside joke between the two parties. Kerens served from 1909 to 1913 under President Taft. The card is postmarked in 1908, the year that Austria-Hungry annexed Bosnia-Herzegovina, a move that led to much unrest and eventually the assassination of the Archduke Ferdinand in 1914. World War I started 4 months later.
Interesting side note: There was a short-lived (1992-1993) TV series produced by George Lucas, "The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles". In one episode called "Vienna, November 1908" an actor portrays Ambassador Kerens.
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