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Friday, February 18, 2011

Sepia Saturday Week 62 1907 Postcard

Despite the genealogy research I've done on Jerry's side, I cannot identify these people as relatives  but  here they are in this  old 1907  photo/post card which Aunt Marie had saved.  They are from this MN area, and from the era when a postcard was mailed to stay in touch with family, rather than phoning or driving the miles.  So different from today where we'd pick up the phone, drive that distance without  any thought and/or use email. 

This card was mailed to Charles Behrndt, Jerry's Grandpa, from Lottie, who was Charlie's sister.  The mystery people are identified by the writing  along side of the card as Gib (or Gil) Dolan, Anna Noel, Lena Noel, and Mary Dolan.  It looks as though they were out for a hike through the woods and/or were clearing land. Their clothes do not appear to be what one would wear to do work on the land, at least not the women's.  I see no evidence of a picnic in process, just looks like they stopped, sat on the ground and had the photo taken.  It will be a mystery to solve and learn what link is this to Charlotte (Lottie)  who married Otto Ziemann, as I have previously shared here.  When Lottie sent this card she and Otto were likely  living in Preston  where the  1910 census shows them; Preston is  about 60 miles  south west of La Crescent, where Charlie was settled. For some reason she thought her brother  would be interested, but she did not write anything on the back side.  Otto was a meat wholesaler and traveled through northern MN and was also a  butcher, so I doubt this is land that the Ziemann's had cleared for a home.  They lived in what was the town at the time and  she taught school.   It seems unusual to me to see one man and three women if this was land to be cleared to farm or to build.  What do you think?

1907 from Lottie
 This is the back of the postcard showing it was mailed from Preston but in 1907 there were no  highways and so visits and trips were not routine.  I wonder  why Lottie sent this photo to her brother with no other information.  In the funeral books of Charles and his wife, Esther many years later, there are Noel's who  sign the guest book.  There must have been some connection.  It is also amusing that it could be addressed to Charlie in La Crescent which had a population of maybe a few hundred at the time among the hills and farms and that the card would easily reach the addressee.   


Jerry laughs and says he has not a clue and if I want to spend time trying to solve this well, then he  figures it keeps me from pestering him. 

As always click on the title to this post to go to the Sepia site and see what others in the community have shared this week. 

15 comments:

  1. I'm so enchanted by old writing, posts, pictures. A life comes alive!

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  2. I love this photo. It brings all kinds of questions to mind. Why sit down in this very unattractive place? Why is the one girl laughing and everyone else so serious? Very fun to speculate about.
    Nancy

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  3. Gib doesn't look as though he really wants to be there although the ladies seem happy enough.

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  4. It is possible that there was no mail delivery at that time and you picked up mail at the pose office which could have been in the "General Store."
    As late as the mid 1960's, the little town of Knights Ferry's post office was the check out counter of the only market in town. Everything was general delivery. I forget when the RFD, Rural Free Delivery, was established but I'm pretty sure that it wasn't until the twenties, possibly even the thirties. Where the people are appears to be a logged over area. There is a lot of slash and several large stumps are visible. From the clothing, I think they are on the way home from church and stopped to rest a few minutes. Just a theory. LOL Transportation in 1907 was generally by horse drawn wagon if you lived in the country, probably by carriage for the town folk and only the well to do had automobiles. Around this same era, my grandfather had a farm in MO. It was basically subsistance without a cash crop of any note. When he needed money for stuff they couldn't raise or make he would cut, hand hewn, railroad ties and take a wagon load to town and sell them to the RR. Tom

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  5. Interesting, I hope you do find who they are and honour them as that

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  6. It is a lovely picture, and the body language speaks loud and clear : the way the ladies are gathered in a half-circle for protection. There is a strong similarity between old postcards and modern means of communication such as emails (and more particularly, Facebook messages).

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  7. What a happy group of people enjoying a lovely day! I just love going through old postcards and letters (the few that I have, mostly my grandmother's) she had the foresight to me much of her writings...we had writing, words, pictures, art and being funny in common!

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  8. BTW I just love the photos you have on your blog as I read or write a comment, especially since its like 12 degrees, cold and going to snow again here....brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr! (I know it can get worse, but I've had enough of winter for this year haven't you?!!!!)

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  9. Hi Pat,

    I have some old postcards from that time period also. One has a message, and the others don't. I was under the impression that they were mailed out at the same time. Or, that maybe it was just standard practice to let your loved ones know that you were thinking of them as you traveled around.

    Thank you so much for stopping by today to say hello. Take care,

    Kathy

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  10. Always fascinating to look at the places people chose to be photographed. A woods cut down, there must have been a story. Perhaps an area where a house is to be built.

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  11. Thanks for stopping by. I love this postcard. What stories we can come up with such as these with nothing definite on it. Just like having a prompt to stimulate the imagination. Sure looking forward to some flowers coming along here soon.
    Blessings
    QMM

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  12. the Body Language in the photo is a Joy.Very relaxed + open.
    Maybe, as the town was so small, they knew the postman would recognize the people in the photo,and therefore know the intended recipient?

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  13. Maybe there is a man taking the picture so he is not so outnumbered. He does look distant to the group.

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  14. funny that it should be addressed so simply and reach its destination. nowadays, you miss one digit in the zipcode and it is returned to you. postmasters were more reliable back then, me thinks...
    :)~
    HUGZ

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  15. Adore that photo!! Absolutely wonderful.

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