Alan Mays

Alan Mays club

Posted: 10 Feb 2025


Taken: 09 Feb 2025

1 favorite     1 comment    62 visits

See also...

Photos trouvées Photos trouvées


Old Photographs Old Photographs


old photos old photos


Real Vintage Real Vintage


found photos found photos


See more...

Keywords

H. B. Rood Photo
real photo postcards
cupids
Valentine's Day
rppc
February 14
Cupid
snow sculpture
Rood
Saint Valentine's Day
Green Mountain
vptp
H. B. Rood
Harry B. Rood
Poultney
Green Mountain Junior College
Green Mountain College
Ames Hall
junior colleges
Vt.
Vermont
ephemera
holidays
photographs
old
vintage
antique
buildings
photos
snow
arrows
greeting cards
greetings
colleges
found photos
postcards
valentines
1940s
photographers
cards
hearts
1948


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

62 visits


Valentine's Day Snow Sculpture, Poultney, Vermont, 1948

Valentine's Day Snow Sculpture, Poultney, Vermont, 1948
A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of Valentine's Day - hearts, cupids, arrows, love, or what have you?

This real photo postcard features a snow sculpture of Cupid standing next to a heart with an arrow through it. A building is in the background, and two cars are parked along the street in front of the building. Two women are walking near one of the trees on the left.

The card is addressed on the other side to Edith Towey, 1744 Summerfield St., Brooklyn 27, N.Y., and it was postmarked in Poultney, Vermont, on February 13, 1948. The location of the snow sculpture is listed on the verso as "Green Mountain Junior College, Poultney, VT," and a handwritten "Valentine's Greetings" appears above the name of a studio, "H. B. Rood Photo, Poultney, VT."

According to a brief biography by the Poultney Historical Society, Harry B. Rood (1871-1960) lived in Poultney his entire life. He began working in his father's photography studio in the 1890s and continued as a photographer after his father's death.

At the time Rood took this photo, Green Mountain Junior College was a two-year college for women and then became a four-year college for both men and women in 1974, when its name changed to Green Mountain College. Ames Hall, the campus building that appears in the photo, is still standing, but the college itself closed in 2019 after experiencing financial difficulties.

Smiley Derleth has particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Deborah Lundbech
Deborah Lundbech club
At a first glance, I wondered of this was taken at Dartmouth College where snow sculptures were a yearly tradition.
Actually, my mother-in-law was a house mother at Green Mountain College for several years and my husband-to-be and I went to a post College graduation there in the late 70s, along with Brian's brother and his girlfriend.
I remember an unofficial gathering in a nearby field where girls from the dorm gave my mother -in-law an award - also an award to another girl in the dorm (forget what it was) with my mother -in-law commenting, "Sometimes girls can be so mean."
I thought it was still an all girls school then - but perhaps there were just no enrolled boys at that time.
Before it closed it had a focus on environmental education. We were sad to see it close.
11 days ago. Edited 11 days ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.