This site is
dedicated to showcasing vintage postcards of Cincinnati and the surrounding communities.
I am also adding many photographs that relate to, and increase knowledge of,
these postcards. My areas of interest consist of all communities inside the I-275 circle freeway,
plus many communities that are located just on the outside of this
corridor. In addition to Kentucky, I-275 also goes thru Indiana so you will
also see some cards from Lawrenceburg, Indiana. You will not see many cards of Northern Kentucky
here because they are already available on, what I consider, one of the best
postcard sites on the web. You will find a link at the bottom of this
page. As most of these
cards are from my own collection I am continually adding new ones so, if it has
been awhile since you looked at a section, you may want to check them out again. The ages of these cards range from
the early 1880's up to the present time. Everything is pretty basic, you click on the image to
bring up a larger view and use your back arrow to return.
The postcard view is now highly sought after by many
institutions and individuals, as it serves as a historical record of the past.
Be it the view of a town main street, the local church, school, roadside
attraction or the countryside, the postcard mirrors the way our parents, grand-parents and even ourselves, once lived. Captured in these small hand held images
are views of people in the dress of the day, often at work, at play, at school or at church, offering us a nostalgic look back in time.
People from the city spent their summers in the country, and
others who traveled or went "visiting", all sent postcards back home.
In almost every home could be found sitting on the living room table an album of
these cards that were eagerly looked at whenever visitors would drop by. Even
those that lived in towns and cities would send postcards to each other for in
the early 1900's the postcard was the e-mail of the day.
Real photo postcards, in many cases, were taken by family members
to preserve the families history for future generations. In many other instances
real photo postcards were taken by professional photographers showing the
results of disasters occurring where they lived. They also photographed
important events, festivities, parades, and anything else that they felt future
generations would want to see. The very popular Kodak camera in the early days
had a small door on the back that could be opened, and using a metal stylus
supplied, the photographer would pull a small white strip of tape off the image
they had just taken and they would than be able to write a small message stating
what the picture showed. Unfortunately many people using these cameras were not
informed of this capability and thus many real photos we see today are not
identified. The Personal Brownie Camera allowed only one copy of an image while
the Kodak 1A camera allowed 6 or 12 copies to be made. These copies could be
used as "contact" negatives to make more copies but the quality of the
image was reduced. After WWII large volume rotary photo processing machines made
RPPC images available in the 1000s per run.
There was literally nothing that could not be found on a
postcard, with the possible exception of pornographic content, and I would not bet against that possibility. You have to understand that a
great many cards were not stamped and mailed but were placed inside envelopes
and mailed thus preserving the image from possible damage from canceling
machines, it also allowed the sender to mail several cards using only one stamp.
This practice also kept prying eyes from seeing what was on the card. This is
why you will see postcards with messages on them but no stamp or Post Office
cancellations.
Every card is a glimpse into places and eras long gone, yet these
images have been preserved thanks to these little pieces of paper stock. Every
card you see today is because someone, somewhere felt that it was special enough
to be saved as a keepsake.
Up until 1952 it only cost 1 cent to send a postcard and the
mail was delivered very quickly. In large cities mail was delivered 3 or more
times a day! In many smaller towns, it was delivered twice a day.
For those of you who
are curious about how many images of postcards I have put up,
the total as of 9/01/14 is 12,674, (Not counting their backs). I have tried to adjust the elements
on the pages so that they can be viewed properly at 800x600 but you may see some
words or cards in places that just do not look right. If you will take the time
to e-mail me about them or any other problems you find I will see about fixing the problem.
If any of the thumbnail images fail to appear and you see a red x
place your cursor on the x
then click the right button on your mouse and click
show picture that should cure the problem (if not, let me know).
I have come into possession of a book called
"Cincinnatians as we see them" that was made in 1905. It contains 475 pages of drawings of prominent Cincinnatians that
were done by the various artists working at that time for the local newspapers.
You will start to see some of these popping up all over the site. There are many you will not see
until I get a postcard to connect it with. If you have an interest in someone of
that era, drop me a line and, if I can, I will send you a image (there are many
drawings of lawyers, doctors, etc.). You may notice as you begin to see more of
these drawings that two of the artists always added something to their images.
You will always see a drawing by Shafer to contain a black cat, and all those by
Bushnell will have a white dog with big eyes.
I have come to the conclusion that there are way too
many great postcards that I will never acquire. So in order for you to see a
greater spectrum of views, if there is anyone out there reading this and you
have some cards you think people would like to see, please send them to me. If I
do use them I may clean them up if necessary so they look good. If you have not
figured it out yet all my cards are not as pristine as you see them here.
I will leave it up to you as to whether or not you would like to be identified
as the owner of the card. When you see a * next
to a card it means it is not one of mine.
LESSON LEARNED 1; When I was forced to get a new laptop recently, I found out
something that I had no inkling of. For many years I have used a different
font for my page headings. It is called MONOTYPE CORSIVA and I thought nothing
of it because it worked fine with my earlier laptops. This time my new computer
did not have this font. When any computer comes across a print font that it does
not have, it uses what is called a "default font". These are common
fonts that are on every computer. My page headings looked lousy and after I had
finally figured out the problem I went to a free font download site and
downloaded the Monotype Corsiva font. After installing it, LO and BEHOLD my page
headings looked normal. You don't have to do anything, but if you are curious
about what it should look like, do what I did.
LESSON LEARNED 2; If this site suddenly looks different such as spacing of
lines different, lines under words a different color, etc., this suddenly
happened to me. As usual confusion reigned supreme. It turns out that one of my
Windows updates gave me a upgraded browser version If you look at the top
left corner of your screen you may see this: Compatability Button.jpg (13627 bytes)
the second icon from the right, to the left of the circular arrow has been
added. It only appears when you enter an old web site such as mine (started this
web around the mid 90s.) All I did was click on this icon and everything
instantly looked normal once again. Well it seems that things have changed
once again. I received another browser update and my icon disappeared. You
now have to go to tools, after clicking that you will find a compatibility link,
you click on that and you have to put my site on their list. Once you do that
things go back to normal (at least until the next update.) There seems to still
be a small problem that is not being corrected with the compatibility link, The
wording under many of the images are out of alignment. There is nothing I can do
to correct this problem because it looks fine on my computer but when I upload
to my web site it moves. The problem does not seem to be terribly bad and, for
now, I will have to live with it.
If you have some cards you think I might be interested
in, or you just have some comments or suggestions about the content
HELP
Every once in awhile I get a
real photo postcard that has not been identified except for some writing on the
back that says Cincinnati. This ,of course, means very little as proof that it
is, in fact, a Cincinnati card. Someone who is interested in selling the card
can write anything they want on a card just to get rid of it. I have added a
page for these cards in the hope that someone with more knowledge and
information than I will be able to identify them. Any help would be greatly
appreciated. A link to the page is HERE.
[画像:Online Postcards]
POSTCARD SITES
NORTHERN KY. VIEWS:
A well laid out site with thousands of postcards and photographs. Covers many counties of Northern Kentucky.
NEWPORT POSTCARDS:
Send an electronic card of
some of Newport's postcards.
CINCINNATI
LIBRARY : When you arrive click on the
GREATER CINCINNATI MEMORY PROJECT LINK.
NON-POSTCARD LINKS
CINCINNATI
TRANSIT: Loads of information about transportation related subjects of
the area.
OHIO ONLINE SPORTSBOOKS: A detailed guide covering the best Ohio sports betting sites as reviewed by online-gambling.com.
CINCINNATI RAILROADS:
Extremely well laid out site on the
railroads of Cincinnati.
CINCINNATI
FIRE DEPT :
Very informative site containing just about anything you
would want to know about Cincinnati's finest.
KY'S
KENTON COUNTY LIBRARY : 7,000 images
some of them postcards. Another 8,000 to be added soon with +30,000 total
eventually.
LIBRARY
OF CONGRESS : Thousands of
photographs of Cincinnati.
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