history


Here’s the first of several carriage- or driving-related (or otherwise interesting) photos that I found in our Glimpses of the World book. The photo captions, naturally, describe the man-made or natural wonders shown but make no mention of any horse-drawn vehicles in the photos.

I’m sure we wouldn’t say anything about the automobiles that “interfere” with our modern photos of landscapes or buildings, either. I know I wouldn’t mention them and would usually rather they weren’t in my photos at all. Likewise, most of the photos in our old book don’t have any vehicles in them, but some of the streets were just too busy to leave the pedestrians, horses, and vehicles out of their portraits.

In front of the Paris Opera House, we can see a number of Broughams (serving as taxicabs, no doubt) and a three-abreast of gray horses hitched to a crowded Omnibus.

(To see a larger version of the photo, click on the photo once and then, when a new version comes up, click on it again.)

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This is the photo caption from the book:

“This is not merely one of the most magnificent structures of the French metropolis, but is the largest theatre in the world; not strictly so in regard to its seating capacity, which accommodates about 2,200 people, but in the area of three acres which it occupies in the very heart of the city. The first view of it as one approaches it along the boulevards can never be forgotten. Broad marble steps lead up to a facade adorned with groups of statuary representing Lyric Poetry, Idyllic Poetry, Music, Declamation, Song, and Dance. Above these are medallions of four great composers, and over these extends along the full width of the structure a loggia or gallery embellished with beautiful Corinthian monolithic columns and a marble parapet. Above the windows of this loggia, the eye beholds with pleasure medallion busts, in gilded bronze, of Mozart, Beethoven, Auber, Rossini, Meyerbeer, and Halevy, whose noble works are heard so frequently within the Temple of Music which they thus adorn. To right and left upon the roof colossal groups in gilded bronze stand radiantly forth against the sky, portraying the divinities of Poetry and Music with the muses in their train. While to complete the charm of this extraordinary building, there rises in the center a majestic dome above the crown of which we see, triumphant over all, the statue of Apollo holding aloft a golden lyre, which still reflects the splendor of the setting sun long after evening has begun to spread its shadows over the adjacent streets, which soon will burst forth from that temporary twilight into a blaze of artificial brilliancy almost as light as day, which makes the place of the Grand Opera seem like the diamond-clasp in that long belt of gaity, display, and fashion known as the Parisian boulevards.”

Quite a while ago, A.J. and I found a wonderful book in one of our local antique stores …
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It’s Glimpses of the World: A Portfolio of Photograghs of the Marvelous Works of God and Man, and it was “prepared under the supervision of the distinguished lecturer and traveler John L. Stoddard, containing a rare and elaborate collection of photographic views of the entire world of nature and art.” The photos were taken in the late nineteenth century, and the book was published in 1892.

Needless to say, there are a few old street scenes included in the book, which I’ll share with you here. Stay tuned.

I realize that this last “old Christmas card” isn’t actually a Christmas card, but I think it fits in with our overall theme nonetheless.

On the front …

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And on the back …

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Unfortunately, I can’t read the postmark date, but the card was sent to Mrs. Geo. Simpson in Palmyria, Indiana. And the message reads, “Wishing you and (Husband) a very Happy year and a successful one. Your Bro, Bill”

These and other hard-working horses in the nation’s capital received a bit of a treat in 1919, when they were presented with a Christmas tree covered in edible decorations.

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This old card is probably my favorite from among my small (but growing!) collection of antique and vintage Christmas cards and postcards.

On the front, a bright yellow Deutsche Post mail coach is trundling through a snowstorm, and dropping Christmas packages along the way. The printed text in the lower left says, “Merry Christmas!” in German, and it’s signed “Jens, Else & Heidi.”

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The interesting thing for me, when I turned the postcard over, is that the addressee lived in Mainz, which is where I lived many years ago. There’s also a lovely old stamp, obscured by the postmark. And both the “departure” and “arrival” postmarks are a bit difficult to read … but the card arrived in Mainz on Dec. 25, 1906.

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