Well, so it would appear. I have many questions for Tracy, and I wish he were alive to answer them. This card was sent to Master Graham c/o Tracy Graham. Remember when young boys were addressed as Master? Anyway, the dates seem right for this to be his son. The earlier postcards, presumably from his bachelor years, were dated 1906 and 1910. Then there's a card addressed to Tracy and his wife from 1913. So, here it is 1925, and they appear to have at least one child.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Happy Birthday, Brother Walter
May 4. 1916
Dear Brother Walter here is a little girl for your Birthday and many more to come
love from Sister SusanThe Till family seems to have been very close and I have many birthday cards to Walter from his siblings.
Monday, August 23, 2010
Good for What Ails You - Part 2
Another metamorphic trade card (approx. 1880) for your amusement:
Oh, the poor man! But just flip back the bottom of the card and he's cured - and dancing!
Oh, the poor man! But just flip back the bottom of the card and he's cured - and dancing!
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I also find it interesting that this card was printed by Donaldson Brothers in Five Points, New York. There is no longer a Five Points, New York. It was such a terrible crime-ridden slum in new York City that it was razed in 1885-95. Five Points had the highest murder rate in New York and in the world. It was swampy and full of crowded tenement housing, insects, and vermin. One tenement building with 1,000 residents was reputed to have an average of one murder a night for 15 years until it was torn down in 1852. The entire area was dominated by rival gangs, including the Bowery Boys. This was also the location of the infamous Tombs prison. Charles Dickens described the area in his 1842 work, American Notes. Oh, I couldn't help myself; I've gone off on a tangent. Anyway, I'm not sure why Donaldson Bros. decided to locate there (cheap labor?) but they were a major printer of postcards and trade cards.
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