Showing posts with label kansas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kansas. Show all posts
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Destroying Photo Albums
Every so often, I feel the need to complain about the wanton destruction of photo albums and the breaking up of collections by antique dealers. I understand that they're trying to increase their profits by selling individual images, but come on, there's history to think about. It's true that the average person thinks of war, elections, and famous people when they hear the word history, but there is a whole other historical past out there; the past of the ordinary, they way people lived, the day by day that's every bit as important as who won the election of 1884.
The dealer who sold me these images, as well as some others that may or may not have come from the same source, saw the two studio portraits as his profit. When those photos wouldn't pull off the page, out came the razor blade and goodbye photo album. Now, I admit that they are lovely images, but when I turned them over...all I could think of was how much more interesting they would have been if I could have put her life into some sort of context. And if the dealer hadn't cut things up, I might have been able to do that. The funny thing is, I bought these two photos plus five other images in an envelope, for five dollars. I would have paid more for a single page of the album, with both sides intact, and even more for the whole album.
Embossed on the second photo, "BAUGH WINFIELD, KANS" I couldn't find anything about the photographer. Winfield, Kansas is a town in southern Kansas, current population, 12,000+.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
The Rainbow Club, Topeka, Kansas


I have a number of these old souvenir photo folders in the collection. (Click on nightclub or souvenir photo folder in the labels section to see others.) Before and during World War 2, many peoples idea of a great time on Saturday night was to get dressed up, go out to a club, have dinner and dance to what ever big band was playing. After the war, the ball room/nightclub began to loose some of it's appeal. Big bands would give way to jazz combos, and then jazz's very brief period of main stream popularity would yield to rock and roll, and the era of the nightclub would die. This image is from that period of transition. Written in pencil on the back of the folder, "10-22-49, Russ Stevenson's Birthday." The Rainbow Club looks more like an old fashioned road side diner, and at that, not a particularly nice one. Stamped on the back of the folder, "For extra copies, Contact Jayhawker 1356 Medford Photo No. T638 Topeka, Kansas." Stamped on the back of the photo, "Jayhawker Commercial Photos 1356 Medford, Topeka, Kansas." I did a search on this club, both in Topeka and all of Kansas, and couldn't find anything.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Who Is the Master?

.
.
Printed on postcard stock. Written on the back, "Master Carl Nugen Harfer, Kans." To the modern mind it reads like some sort of domination cult, but master very likely refers to school master. These may be three couples or the six teachers at a small, rural school in late nineteenth, early twentieth century Kansas.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)