Remember Tracy? No, of course you don't, but I suspect he was a real character. I have a number of postcard addressed to him. Click here for a link to the previous one, where it appears he had been trying to fix a ballgame. And here's another one below, postmarked February, 1906. Oh, Tracy, what have you done?
Hmmm, no indication of who sent it.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Herford, Germany
Herford is a city of 65,000 in the North Rhine-Westphalia region of Germany that was originally founded by Charlemagne in 789. The city still has some buildings dating from the 11th and 12th centuries, but it also has a contemporary art museum designed by Frank Gehry. This card is most interesting to me because of its varied fonts and writing styles.
The message on the front of the card is written in old German script, by someone who was accustomed to writing on the front of the cards due to early postal regulations that allowed nothing other than the address on the back of the card. This card has a place for the message, which is blank. I struggle with old German script, but it appears to be a simple happy birthday greeting from grandma.
The address was likely written by someone else, since the handwriting is different. On top of that, Postkarte is printed in a very distinctive art nouveau or Jugendstil style, while the text below is an old German Fraktur font. The front of the card has a modern font along with another one that I don't recognize. It's just all a strange intersection of old and new styles. It looks like the card was sent in 1907.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Biarritz, France - Part 2
The Rock of the Virgin in Biarritz, France was named after the statue of the Virgin Mary that was placed there in 1865. It was Napoleon III who decided to make a tunnel through the rock and have it connect to the shore via a bridge. The original bridge was wood, but the current bridge is a metal one built by Gustave Eiffel of Eiffel-Tower fame.
In bad weather you can't cross the bridge, because the waves crash into it, although that didn't seem to stop these people:
The last card was mailed from Madrid on December 30th, 1911 to Madame Marie de Vignier in care of R.M. de Vignier. The message reads:
Many thanks dear Marie for your New Year's wishes, which we sincerely reciprocate. Remember us to Fernand and all of your children. Yours sincerely, your cousin and friend
Therese M. Vignier
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