Thursday, July 27, 2023

If this is Thursday it must be postcards, 617

 

 

 

 

 


 

The Fountain of Trevi, Rome, Italy

 

This is another unused postcard found in a jumble of cards at a local antique pavilion.  It features a black & white photograph of the Trevi Fountain in Rome, Italy.  The card has portions of the photo tinted a pink-purple color.  There is a blurb on the reverse: “The Fountain of Trevi, Rome.—This celebrated fountain is one of the gems of sculpture in Rome and is so beautiful and attractive that it is visited by everyone who has the good fortune to go to Rome.  Everybody who leaves Rome, dating back for many hundred years, throws a piece of coin in the fountain, saying a little prayer for their preservation and safe return, and it is said the good spirits of saints of Rome watch over those who perform this duty and bring them safely back to Rome.”  There is no information on the card giving credit to a photographer or the printer, publisher or distributor.

 

Nicola Salvi (1697-1751), an Italian architect, designed the Trevi Fountain but died before it was completed.  The remaining work was done by Giuseppe Pannini and others in 1762.  The fountain is 86 ft or 26.3 m high and 161.3 ft or 49.15 m wide.  It is the largest Baroque fountain in Rome and one of the most famous fountains in the world.  The name comes from the Latin, trivium, or intersection of three roads.  Several sculptors were hired to complete the decorations on the fountain.  The fountain has been refurbished and restored three times in modern history.  The most recent restoration included the addition of 100 LED lights to improve nighttime illumination. 

 

 Anciently aqueducts supplied pure water to Rome for 400 years.  During the 6th century the aqueducts were not well maintained and some were damaged following the invasion of the Ostrogoths.  Later they were repaired.  Amazingly, the aqueduct could still be used now; however, the fountain recirculates the water today. 

 

For more information, see:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trevi_Fountain

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicola_Salvi

 

Thursday, July 20, 2023

If this is Thursday it must be postcards, 616

 

 

 

 


 

W. VA 21, Hairpin Curve, near Grafton and Clarksburg, West Virginia

 

Rex Heck News Co. of Clarksburg, West Virginia printed and published this linen-type postcard using Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Colortone.”  The alpha-numeric code:  5A-H1979 is found at the lower right corner on the front of the card.  The photograph shows the road curving around a geological rock formation. 

 

This card has another one of nature's oddities or beauties.  There are lots of interesting rock formations in West Virginia.  Some are even named, although the one on this card is not.  It appears that when the road was being constructed the workers elected to leave the rock where it was and curve the road around it.  The title provides a clue to where it is located; U.S. Route 50, east of the towns of Grafton and Clarksburg, West Virginia.  Highway 50 runs from the border with Ohio to Virginia.  It was originally known as West Virginia Route 1.  Today it is part of Corridor D of the Appalachian Development Highway System.  Much of the roadway parallels the North Bend Rail Trail Park system, crossing the trail at three places. 

 

For more information, see:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Route_50_in_West_Virginia

 

https://theculturetrip.com/north-america/usa/west-virginia/articles/why-these-rock-formations-fascinate-west-virginia-locals/

 


Thursday, July 13, 2023

If this is Thursday it must be postcards, 615

 

 

 

 


 

 

Devil’s Slide, Weber Canyon, Utah, 1940s

 

Usually, vintage postcards are 100 years old or older.  This unused card is not that old but it was identified as a vintage card dating from the 1940s by different sellers.  I found this one in a jumble box at an antique pavilion.  It is a linen-type card with natural color printed by the E.C. Kropp Co. and published by Ogden News, Co., Ogden, Utah. 

 

 

This is a souvenir card featuring a picture of the geological formation located near the border of Wyoming and Utah and called Devil’s Slide.  The Weber River flows between the freeway and the slide along I-84.  Parking and viewing areas can be found on both sides of the highway.  The river and a passenger train can be seen.

 

 

There is a short blurb at the upper left and the number 374 at the top right side, both on the reverse.  The information in the blurb is slightly different from more modern information: “Stretching imagination was not required to name the outcropping of porphyry, Devil’s Slide, rising from the water below and extending far up the side of the mountain in Weber’s Canyon, near Echo.  The two limestone reefs are 20 feet apart and stand out 40 feet from the general slope of the canyon side.”  Note:  The Wikipedia.org article, linked below, has the distance between the reefs as 8 ft or 2.4 m.  The card calls the rock both porphyry and limestone while the Wikipedia.org article just describes the rock as limestone.  Porphyry is a decorative granite or igneous rock that has crystals, feldspar, and quartz embedded in it.  For interested readers, Wikipedia.org includes a couple of legends about Devil’s Slide.

 


This is one of four other such formations in the United States, including in California and Montana called Devil's Slide.  Originally discovered by Utah settlers who were working on the Transcontinental Railroad in the 1840s, the Utah slide was also called “Gutter Defile.” 

 

For more information, see:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devil%27s_Slide_(Utah)

http://www.sentfromthepastpostcards.com/index.php/publishers/e-c-kropp-co/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porphyry_(geology)

 

Thursday, July 6, 2023

If this is Thursday it must be postcards, 614

 

 

 

 

 


 

The George Wythe House, Williamsburg, Virginia

 

This is an unused postcard with a color photo by Walter H. Miller.  Miller was both a photographer and the publisher of postcards.  The number 2730 is found at the bottom of the center line on the reverse.  The blurb at the top left corner:  “The George Wythe House, Williamsburg, Virginia.  This house was erected in 1755 by Richard Taliaferro [Taliafero], father-in-law of George Wythe.  Wythe was a signer of the Declaration of Independence and the first law professor in America.  He was the teacher of Thomas Jefferson and Chief Justice John Marshall.”

 

The historic house is located on the Palace Green in Colonial Williamsburg, in Williamsburg, Virginia.  It was originally owned by Wythe’s father-in-law who later gave it as a wedding gift to his daughter, Elizabeth, and George Wythe in 1755.  Taliafero continued to live with them in the house until his death in 1779.  Wythe and Elizabeth also received life tenancy upon Taliafero’s death in 1779.  After Elizabeth died in 1787, George moved to Richmond, Virginia in 1791 to serve as a judge.  Ownership of the house changed hands several times before Colonial Williamsburg officially obtained the property in 1938.  In 1939 the interior was restored to the way it looked when the Wythe family lived there.

 

Prior to the Siege of Yorktown, General George Washington used the house as headquarters.  The property includes gardens and outbuildings, such as a smokehouse, external kitchen, laundry, poultry house, lumber house, well, dovecote, and a stable.  The house is on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, is a U.S. National Historic Landmark, a U.S. National Historic Landmark District Contributing Property, and on the Virginia Landmarks Register.

 

For additional information, see:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Wythe

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wythe_House