Repack Rider
Senior Retro Guru
Because I am the family archivist, a few years ago a large collection of postcards, handed down through three generations, made its way into my collection. They sat in a box for a while, then I put them into a photo album, just to protect them. I thought nothing of it, until I showed them to a friend. He flipped out! I took a closer look, and concurred, it is an amazing collection.
I scanned them and made a Flickr account to display them. Most were sent by a distant uncle who worked for a steamship line, and traveled the world. He went to places almost no one had even heard of then, and he dutifully reported his whereabouts through post cards.
A striking aspect is the remarkable flowing handwriting, common then, non-existent now.
One card is dated April 18, 1906, sent from Macau, China on the same day the legendary earthquake hit San Francisco. It passed through the San Francisco Post Office just six weeks after the earthquake. I'll post that one, and you can see the others at the Flickr site.
I scanned them and made a Flickr account to display them. Most were sent by a distant uncle who worked for a steamship line, and traveled the world. He went to places almost no one had even heard of then, and he dutifully reported his whereabouts through post cards.
A striking aspect is the remarkable flowing handwriting, common then, non-existent now.
One card is dated April 18, 1906, sent from Macau, China on the same day the legendary earthquake hit San Francisco. It passed through the San Francisco Post Office just six weeks after the earthquake. I'll post that one, and you can see the others at the Flickr site.