Salinas Rodeo Girls

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“Showing their Levi’s, California Rodeo, Salinas, July 13 – 16, 1939”

Great vintage postcard showing photo of seven beautiful cowgirls lined up and posing in their dungarees, boots, hats, and western shirts. Photo taken at the Salinas, California Rodeo grounds for the July 1939 four-day event. If you look closely you will see two horses with their riders in the background.

Divided back, unused postcard. Publisher unknown, S-34 (series 34 or number S34)  Circa 1939.

Availability status:  SOLD. (This postcard is the second of two of the same photo – both were sold.)

With All Kind Thoughts

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“Holbrook Aug 4, 1912. Dear cousen. I ame all right and hope you are felling better then you was or at least not so tired. well I have had some bad luck since I come home friday I lost that horse we was talk about. I docter her all day then next day after I got home she died about ten oclock at night. the little colt is just seven weeks old she was the best one I had. from your cousen J. W. Carter”

Another in the J. W. Carter series, and a terribly sad one.  We send all kind thoughts and ((hugs)) to J. W. and the colt. The horseshoe on the front of the card is appropriate, isn’t it?

On the bright side, this is a lovely, understated card of a gold-tone horseshoe with a small bunch of four-leaf clover that is caught up in a red ribbon. Below these good luck symbols is a city skyline scene, which appears way off in the distance. A white border of scroll work and clover complete the card.

Divided back, embossed postcard, unused with writing. Circa 1912. Publisher:  KLC or KL Company. Series 109.

Mary D. Piepho Calling Card

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Calling card, circa 1883 – 1888

Price:  $10.00          Size:  About 1 and 3/4 x 3 and 3/4″

Calling card for Mary D. Piepho, found in the Central Coast area of California. The lettering and stylized scroll work around the capital letters are beautiful, and a close-up look of the pink bow and “folded over” area reveals surprising details of the grain in the ribbon (or perhaps they are stripes) and the fabric-like fringe on the edges of the corner fold.

The woman that carried this calling card is possibly the same person that appears in the Illinois death index, born in Dyer, Indiana 1867, married to Henry Witte and died in Blue Island, Illinois 1943. If this is the correct person, then she married Henry in December of 1888, so this calling card would be from about 1883 – 1888. As of the date of this post, no one else was found under the name of Mary Piepho with the middle initial “D” and while there’s no certainty of having found the correct person, this Mary Piepho is the most probable.

Sources:  Year: 1870; Census Place: Hanover, Lake, Indiana; Roll: M593_333; Page: 387A; Image: 513; Family History Library Film: 545832. (Ancestry.com)

Year: 1880; Census Place: Hanover, Lake, Indiana; Roll: 291; Family History Film: 1254291; Page: 586B; Enumeration District: 073; Image: 0586. (Ancestry.com)

Lake County Indiana; Index to Marriage Record 1850 – 1920 Inclusive Vol, W. P. A. Original Record Located: County Clerk’s O; Book: E; Page: 303. (Ancestry.com)

Ancestry.com. Illinois, Deaths and Stillbirths Index, 1916-1947 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Onboard The S.S. Tacoma

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Old photo, circa 1920, white border.

Price:  $12.00         Size:  About 5 and 3/4 x 3″ and 1/2″.

This is the second photo that, as previously mentioned, likely came from the same unknown family photo album. (See post entitled Onboard The S.S. Alameda.) Perhaps this is grandfather and granddaughter or father and daughter, posing in front of lifeboat number 1, and perhaps these are the same two people that we see on the back of the Tacoma photo. In trying to date this one, we notice that this photo (like the other) has a white border, we see that the little girl is wearing a dress with bloomers, a cloche hat, the man’s suit lapels are rather wide, we notice his hat, the width of his tie, and of course we will look at when this steamship was in operation. The photo caught the little girl (as so often happens to us all, thank goodness now for digital) with eyes closed, and we see other details like it looks like the man has a pencil in his suit pocket, and is that a binoculars case behind his feet? Was the bag on the left for general traveling purposes or was he a businessman and this was a type of briefcase?

The back shows the partial photos of a person who appears to be an older woman, and of a lawn in front of some steps leading up to a building, with the image of the building being very faded. (Wouldn’t it be hilarious if someone recognized this building?)

The S.S. Tacoma, owned by the Puget Sound Navigation Company, was in service between 1913 – 1938 and was known as one of the best-designed and fastest vessels to operate on Puget Sound. She was built of steel, weighed 836 tons, was 209 feet in length, and operated by a steam engine, single propeller. Her speed exceeded the initial expectation of 19 knots, and was timed as high as 21.5 knots. 1913 – 1930 saw her high speed service between the Washington cities of Tacoma and Seattle, but better roads and increased vehicle traffic between the two cities led to the termination of the marine service, and on December 15, 1930 Tacoma made her last regular run. She was still used for occasional excursions between Seattle, Washington and Victoria, British Columbia up until 1938 when she was sold for scrap (always sad to read these types of things) along with some other vessels. (Wikipedia)

As to the date of the photo, one apparently can spend years (kidding, and this is nothing new) searching styles of clothing, hats and shoes. The man’s hat most closely resembles a boater, but it doesn’t necessarily appear to be made from straw. The suit lapels and tie were a little hard to pin down for year. Examples of little girl’s dresses with bloomers were found for the 1920s…In all probability this photo is from the 1920s, especially since the steamer’s regular service stopped at the end of 1930. Some great photos of Tacoma can be found at the second source listed below.

Sources:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacoma_%28steamship%29

http://www.evergreenfleet.com/steamertacoma.html

Onboard The S.S. Alameda

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Old photo, circa 1920

Price:  $12.00           Size:  About 5 and 1/4 x 3 and 1/4″

This is the first of two related photos:  one regarding the S.S. Alameda and the other regarding the S.S. Tacoma. Both very likely came out of the same unknown family photo album. Too bad about the missing part of this photo on the back. I peeled off a little more of the black photo album paper to see if this might have been a Real Photo Postcard but there were no postcard markings underneath, so this (and likely the other) were not made into postcards. You can see some writing at the bottom here, of the type that is processed at the same time as the photo, so maybe this one was a photo that was offered to passengers. I’m not sure if the gentleman posing here next to lifeboat number 12 is the captain or a crew member. The insignia on the hat is hard to read. If anyone can lend clarification, please let me know.

The S.S. Alameda was a commercial steamship built in 1883 in Philadelphia by the William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilding Co. She weighed 5,000 tons, was 332 feet, 5 inches in length, held a crew of 52, and ran at a speed of 15 knots (wikipedia.) There are numerous photos online for her, the one below is from the Library of Congress, and shows her docked (assuming she is docked here in this photo) at Anchorage, Alaska. Just per some quick searches of other online sources, we find that her voyages included many along the Pacific Coast to Alaska, and that she also made trips to San Francisco from ports of Auckland, New Zealand, Sidney, Australia and Honolulu, (at that time Territory of) Hawaii. The third source listed below shows several transcriptions of ship passenger lists from these three embarkation points. (It’s always fascinating to look at passenger lists, and this one from 1893 shows interesting occupations of the travelers such as Actor, Marble Maker and Gold Miner.)

S.S. Alameda photo

The S.S. Alameda operated up until November 28, 1931, when she unfortunately burned in a pier fire in Seattle, Washington. She was registered with the U.S. Navy during WWI but was never commissioned into navy service.

Sources:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Alameda_%28ID-1432%29

http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/99614671/

http://www.immigrantships.net/v2/1800v2/alameda18930831.html