Let's take a break from the weather and check out some of the old postcards I picked up recently at the antique market in Covent Garden.
First, one that I clearly
had to buy, given that it's from my home state -- Florida! Or "The Everglade State," as it is rather mysteriously called on this card. (I've never heard anyone use the nickname "The Everglade State," which, by the way, is wrong, because it's Everglades, plural. I guess "The Sunshine State" eventually eclipsed it as a nickname. There's nothing confusing about sunshine.)
Anyway, this seems like an all-purpose card that could be sold anywhere in Florida, with no specific location given for that picture. The image is credited to the Burgert Brothers, who were well-known photographers in Tampa. Fortunately, their entire archive is now online through the Hillsborough County Public Library, and I was able to find
the original photo, which was taken on First Street in Fort Myers -- where there are
still lots of palm trees.
Get a load of the card's caption:
"Florida offers in bountiful measure glorious vistas of tropical jungle and violet sea, sky blue lakes and limpid streams, crystal clear springs, shining beaches and palm-crowned keys, orchards and gardens, historical shrines and pleasure palaces, sports and recreations for everyone and the blissful privilege of relaxing and resting in the health giving warmth of Florida's golden sunshine."
Whew! Some Chamber of Commerce ad man really went overboard. Of course he failed to mention the stifling heat, gigantic mosquitoes and cockroaches, rattlesnakes and moccasins, and ravenous alligators.
Back to England, now. The "First and Last House" is at Land's End in Cornwall, the very southwestern tip of the country. It's so named because it's the first house you encounter if you're traveling east into England and the last if you're headed west, out to sea. (Not that anyone actually does this at that specific point.) Apparently it
still exists as a tourist attraction.
The card was mailed from Penzance to Redhill, Surrey, in 1955:
"We are spending the day at Land's End. It is glorious and you can see for miles. We are thoroughly enjoying it. Eileen has just taken a snap of us outside here. We have passed through Truro and Penzance. The weather is grand. We are off to some pottery works. -- Lily"
Finally, an old street scene. At first I thought I'd have trouble figuring out this location, but then I noticed the name of the town in very faint lettering over the roadway at the bottom of the image: Brading, Isle of Wight.
Here's the same location in July 2021. It looks remarkably similar.
There's no date on the card, but I'm thinking maybe 1910s or '20s? Someone has written on the back of the unmailed card, "Home of Sarah Warne and William Arnold." I don't know if they mean that specific house in the picture, or Brading in general.
According to Ancestry, Warne and Arnold were both born in the 1870s, were married and had a daughter.
I'm always intrigued by old postcards. I'm meeting my friend Sally at Greenwich Market tomorrow -- maybe I'll find a few more!