Category Archives: Uncle Bob’s Pix

A site for displaying photographs by Bob Lawrence

Honker Post Card!

giantpostcard

Yep, this is a Giant Post Card, 7″ x 11″.

The image is of a standard 1940s post card of downtown Asheville (J11) by Asheville Post Card Company.  However, the image was scaled up for this linen-finish card printed by Standard Souvenirs & Novelties, Inc., Knoxville, Tenn.  This may still have been issued in the late 40s.

Flagship

americandc3

This is one of those post cards that I know something about, but only can suggest other things.
First, it is an American Airlines DC-2, Flagship Line.  It’s at Tri-Cities airport (then McKellar Field).  The first DC-2 flew into the airport in September, 1937.  Judging by the way the photo was taken, I think the photographer was more interested in the news aspect of the occasion than with any person on the flight.  I think the original photo (there’s no attribution) was taken to record that inaugural event.  Piece of history, that.  Two months later, the airport was officially recognized as McKellar Field.
I know it was published by Lisanby’s Gifts in Bristol VA.  It apparently is D-6 of a series.  I do not think the card dates to the time the picture was taken.  I can find no reference on the web to “Lisanby’s Gifts” in Bristol.
There were a number of these for a buck or so each at Abingdon Antique Mall, as of 3/12/16.
If anyone knows anything about this card, I’d appreciate a comment on it.

Piedmont Tea

piedmonttea
Starting in 1987 or so, Piedmont Airlines acquired some Boeing 767-200ERs and began service from Charlotte NC to Gatwick in London.  This tea container (it still has the original tea bags in it) measures about 4.75″ long, 2.75 deep and about 4″ tall.  It was made in England.  I would expect this to have been distributed around the time of the origination of the service.  Speedbird seen!

Morning Window

window

Tobacco Auction

auction

These used to be a common sight in this area.  They were held in big, tin buildings, called “barns”,  in cities and towns and attracted a sizable crowd when the auctions were going on in fall.  Sometimes they hosted music concerts in the off season.  There are some good examples of these tobacco barns in Greeneville.

Title is: Auction Sale in Tobacco Warehouse, South Boston, Virginia

On the back (down the middle): A ‘Natural Finish’ Card Made by Graycraft Card Co., Danville, Va.

In pencil:  Auction started September 23 – 1946

Aside: I helped tie and hang tobacco for drying once.  This is not recommended if you like to keep your hands clean.  Sticky.  Brown.  Smelled good, though.  I used to smoke (a long time ago), so I can say that.

Wiley and Burton

wileyandburton
Which one is Wiley?  I don’t know.  Using standard dating information on real photo postcards, I can figure this was taken in the early 20s and the message on the back, written in pencil, says: “Dear Sister, got your letter yesterday and so glad to hear from you.  Burton is here to day and we broke the mans camera.  will write soon.  your bro Wiley  Love to all.”

It was never mailed.

Couple on Beach

coupleonbeach

This could be a couple in Chattanooga.  The picture was, at some time, pinned to a wall or something (note the pinholes in each corner).  He’s wearing a 1920s “golfing costume”.  See my posting about umbrella rock to see why I think this is a Chattanooga picture.

The car in the background is also 1920s.  Nice looking couple.

I hope they had a good life.

Down the Road into Morning

downtheroad

We were heading down an abandoned and cleared railbed on a frosty morning.  When we hit that sunny area, the temperature went up 10 degrees, easy.

Tourists, what can you say?

turistas

Ah, tourists! What appears to be a nicely dressed family all perched atop umbrella rock on Lookout Mountain in Chattanooga.  Probably much giggling going on.
Here’s what Umbrella Rock is all about:

umbrellarock

Notice that in the picture there is only one sign.  The postcard image shows three.
I think the picture is from the 1900s and the postcard from the 1940s.

Cinderella Stamp

radioexposition

This is a Cinderella stamp.  It’s also called a Poster stamp. This one is about 2″ horizontal and a little over 2″ vertical.

Some time ago, I bought a lot of advertising stamps and didn’t think too hard about doing any research on them.

Turns out (as you can read in the link above) everyone was Over.The.Moon for advertising stamps in the early part of the 20th century.  I don’t know exactly what these wacky ancestors did with the stamps, since they seldom had glue on the back.

American Airlines DC-7

AADC7

American Airlines called this flagship plane the DC-7 Mercury, coast-to-coast in around 8  hours.  It flew for AA from 1953 to 1958 or so, when it became widely apparent that jet engines were the sexy new kid on the block.
Here’s the reverse of this card:
AADC7back

 

Dumb Buy

stamps

I paid $3 for these.  I am stupid.  I actually stand in front of the mirror in the mornings and say, “Please, Bob, don’t buy anything you don’t know anything about.”  And how does that all work out for me?  Each one of these is worth south of 30 cents. But they’re neat as hell.  I only saw two others the same day (one was postmarked and one was torn in half…and postmarked).
I like airplane stuff.  This 1941 carmine air mail stamp depicts a “transport” aircraft.  It puzzled the heck out of me…looked like a Boeing, kind of, in the front, but that tri-tail is pure Constellation, sort of.  A website pointed out that if the wing flaps were lowered, they would scrape the runway on landing.  Anyway, it’s purely fictional, some ignisfatuus in the artist’s concept brain file.  Well, I like ignisfatuus (’cause it’s obscure…a crossword thing), but it’s really just a mashup.

Bellanca 1730

bellanca

I found this at Tri-Cities Flea Market, next to the Boone River, in Bluff City or Piney Flats, your choice.  Anyway, it’s a Bellanca 1730 with registration number N6650V.  It’s a valid registration held by the RRS Viking Company LLC in Dothan AL.  I paid $1 for it.  It’s about 1″ wide nose to tail.  Enamel.

Cool, huh?

Interesting Old Postcard

dancingcats
Why, you ask, is the egregious example of tweeness interesting?
Okay, first, it’s dated.  1911, on the back.
It’s addressed to Blanche Gladson in Rogersville and I see a lot of cards addressed to her.  It’s from her brother, Hal.
It’s pre-WWI, embossed, and probably lithographed in Germany.  It was never mailed.
It’s got “postcard” printed in 13 different languages (it’s “open mail” in Russian) on the back.  There’s also either a printer’s mark or a guild mark in the lower left on the back.  Ask me if I care…
So, in Japanese, it’s “kawaii!”

 

How Far Have We Come?

betavisionfull
From 1979.  The Betavision came to the Japanese market in ’75.
Ah, progress!

Sales Sample Postcard

benhamsfull
First of all, Benhams, in case you might have forgotten, is about 6 miles NNW of Bristol (at the State Line) in Washington County.  To jog your memory further, recall where Benhams Road, Rich Valley Road and Wolf Run Road all come together?  Yep, that’s Benhams.
This is a sales sample card from the Nyce Manufacturing Company of Vernfield PA.  Notice that they make no claim that the scene above is anywhere near Benhams…it’s just a random shot with an old car in it.  You can get 20 different choices for your Chamber of Commerce issue!And, look, if you buy 1000 with your town name in brilliant red ink, you could flog them for a penny each to anyone who wandered into the vicinity and make $2.10, which was nothing to sneeze at in the 1920s.  I’m tagging this as 1920s because the stippling of the print which, I think, was attempting to imitate the fine German litho printing that became unavailable to United States publishers at the beginning of WWI.
Nice (haha, pun intended) card in reasonably good shape for being around 90 years old.

Le Caire. Les Pyramides.

lecairecomplete
This is a very early postcard, possibly lithographed in Germany.  The issuing company is Vegnios & Zachos, Cairo & Luxor.  Card 401.
I did a search of antique Cairo postcards and, while I saw similar designs, I did not find this one.  Bravely I will continue on.  Bravely.

Good Day

goodday
There are so many comments I could make about this picture, but the more I looked at it, the less snarky I got.Here it is on hot, probably weekend, in August, 1954.  Gramps is having a good day.  And the charming lady is going to have sunburned toes, if she’s not careful.

No idea where this was taken or who these people are.  Such is the case with many of the photos I find in antique stores.
The lady, probably in her twenties in this picture, would be in her 80s now.

The Take-off

takeoff
Easily one of my favorite airline cards.  This great 1947 shot, unattributed except for the “Kodachrome by Trans World Airline” cut line, is of a DC-3.
This same shot, on an earlier card, is noted as a “Color Foto by Trans World Airline”.
It’s a linen-finish card.  On the back is the TWA logo and “Litho in U.S.A. – 3-265, 9 -47”

The Cow Card

thecowcard
Yeah, I took one look at this one and thought, “That’s just bizarre.  A cow. In a pond. Water streaming from the cow’s mouth, since it has just taken a drink from the, probably, scummy pond water.  Looking at, what?”
You would get this from some soi disant friend.  What does it mean?  I miss you because you remind me of a cow?

It is totally unenhanced.  Printed in New York state.  Divided back.  Postally unused. Holy cow…