You’re in luck! Because I forgot to post anything yesterday, I’m a) posting earlier than usual today, and b) offering not one but four old street scenes for you to pore over …

First, we have a view of Main Street in Dayton, Ohio, c. 1904. There isn’t a lot of traffic here, but one delivery vehicle is walking down the street, and several horses are waiting patiently along the sidewalk. There also appears to be a fairly major roadworks project, or some sort of repair work, going on.

Second is a a view of Broadway, with the Flatiron Building in the distance, in New York City, c. 1910. On the street are a streetcar, an automobile, a Hansom Cab, a couple of delivery wagons, and a few other horse-drawn vehicles, including what looks like an open-air Omnibus. On the right-hand side of the street is a woman with a hand-pull cart of some sort. Is she perhaps selling flowers?

Finally, here’s a view of Canal Street in New Orleans, c. 1910. There’s quite a lot of, and a wide variety of, traffic in this image. And, bonus image: here’s a second image of the exact same view, but taken about seven minutes later.

Happy studying!

We’ve once again reached that time when I’m frantically diligently working to finish up the next issue of The Carriage Journal. I need to send the e-files for this issue to our printer at the end of the week.

Soooo … I may be doing super-quick blog posts during the remainder of this week so I can concentrate on the magazine.

This pretty photo, which I took at last year’s CIAT Cuts (in France), will be featured on the cover of the March issue …

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A college friend of mine recently spent a year or so in Moscow, Russia, with his family. For months, it seemed, his near-daily Facebook posts consisted merely of … “more new snow.” On a much smaller scale (thank goodness!), we here in Lexington are starting to feel that same way. First we had some snow, then some ice, then some more snow, and some more snow. And, last night, more new snow!

Here’s how a portion of the Kentucky Horse Park looked this morning.

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I’m working on the March issue of The Carriage Journal at the moment, and one of the images I’ll be using is this print of a James Pollard painting …

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Pollard-RoyalMails-DepartureFromTheGeneralPostOffice-London

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I can just image how much fun it must’ve been to be a kid then, hanging around by the gate, watching and listening to the hubbub of all those Mail Coaches setting out for the day.

Many of us are struggling with snow, snow, and yet more snow. And with shoveling sidewalks and wondering how long it will take the snow plows and salt trucks to clear our roads …

But just think how much hard work and time must’ve  been involved in digging out from late-nineteenth-century snowstorms!

The “Two Nerdy History Girls” give us a glimpse into that past in a recent blog post.

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