A Delaware Album, 1900-1930 contains over 300 postcard photographs
from the entire state taken during the period from 1900 to 1930.
Arranged by subjects—City and Town Views; Delaware Beaches;
Amusements; Industry and Agriculture; Signs of the Times; Trains,
Trolleys, and Automobiles; Water Transportation; Schools; Religion;
Businesses; Hotels and Motels—each photo has a caption ranging from
a sentence or two to several paragraphs. The book's introduction
details how the cards were produced, analyzes the subject matter
depicted on the cards, documents the history of several of the most
prominent local photographers in the state whose work is found almost
only on postcards, and traces the evolution and popularization of
postcard photography. Through the photographs readers can witness the
development of Delaware agriculture and fisheries, the expansion of
the railroad into southern Delaware, the declining days of steamship
service on Delaware rivers and creeks, the fate of Middletown's last
trolley, and Delaware's unsuccessful campaign against "King Alcohol."
They can see how Delawareans worshiped, worked, and shopped. They can
visit local amusement parks and beaches from New Castle county to
Sussex county. For the early decades of the twentieth century the
postcard recorded every aspect of American life. As local historians
will tell you, the photographic record of small town America during
the period from 1900 to 1930 exists almost only on postcards. That is
why historical societies, libraries, and museums have begun to amass
postcard collections. In the last twenty years, historians and
scholars have increasingly turned to the postcard as a way of seeing
what our past literally looked like, what we enjoyed doing, where we
worked and played, how we viewed one other, what we thought was
important, and what prejudices we held.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781611490459
Publisert
2012
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter