Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: picnics
Don't Take My Picture
14 Oct 2019 |
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A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of someone is not happy (pouting, scowling, etc.) .
A snapshot of a woman who was understandably annoyed at having her picture taken while she was eating. The typewritten date on the back of the photo is "Aug. 27, 1952."
Notice, too, that there's another women who's barely visible in the background, She's walking past a couple of small structures, which may be outhouses or storage buildings.
Grand Excursion and Picnic Ticket, Penryn Park, Ju…
07 Dec 2020 |
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In 1900, the Sunday schools of churches in Landisville and Salunga, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, organized a trip to Penryn Park, a trolley park that was located about eighteen miles away near Cornwall in Lebanon County (YMCA Camp Shand, a children's summer camp, occupies the park site today).
Grand Excursion and Picnic
By Landisville and Salunga Sunday-schools, Wednesday, July 25, 1900, Penryn Park.
Adults' ticket, 45 cents.
Pluck Print.
Easter Serenade for the Picnic Chicks
21 Apr 2019 |
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"Easter Greetings."
Compare this postcard with Best Easter Wishes from Mr. and Mrs. Bunny-Chick and Family .
Lady's Invitation, Eighth Annual Picnic of the Phi…
21 Mar 2019 |
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"Eighth Annual Pic Nic of the Philadelphia Assembly. Lady's Invitation. Strawberry Mansion. Monday, Sept. 1st, 1856."
A lady's embossed ticket or invitation for the annual picnic of the Philadelphia Dancing Assembly that was held at Strawberry Mansion in 1856.
See also the similarly named Lady's Invitation, Reliance Fire Company, 15th Annual Ball, Jan. 1, 1879 .
Engine Number 30 at the Grangers' Picnic, Cumberla…
31 Dec 2017 |
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Caption on the front of this postcard: " C.V.R.R. Yards, Williams Grove, Pa."
Printed on the back: "14546 - Pub. by A. M. Deichler, Lancaster, Pa., for J. Hurst Est., Mechanicsburg, Pa."
Postmarked Mechanicsburg, Pa., Aug. 30, 1918, and addressed to Miss Grace Hoy, 730 S. Duke St., York, Pa.
Handwritten message: "Dear Cousin, Expected to see you at the Grove but failed to see you there. Such a crowd of people I never seen as was there on Thursday. All well. Hope this will find you all the same. Emma."
A photographic version of this scene appeared in " Grangers at the Grove: Annual Farmers Exhibition Ended Nearly a Century Ago ," a newpaper article by Joseph Cress, which was published in The Sentinel (Carlisle, Pa.), Sept. 5, 2015. "Engine Number 30 arrives in Williams Grove during the Grangers' Picnic in 1916" was the caption of the photographic version, which was provided by the Cumberland County Historical Society.
The Singer Band of Mechanicsburg at the Grangers'…
03 May 2017 |
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Drumhead: "Singer, Mechanicsburg, Pa." Caption at the bottom of the photo: "Grangers Picnic, 1915."
The Singer Band of Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, posed for this photo in 1915 at the Grangers' Picnic, which was an annual event held each summer at the Williams Grove Amusement Park .
Prior to the picnic, the Harrisburg Telegraph newspaper, August 28, 1915, p. 4, announced the Singer Band's participation: "Concerts at the Granger's Picnic at Williams' Grove next week will be given by the Singer Band of Mechanicsburg."
The Singer Band--named for David Singer, an early leader of the group--is still in existence today. Additional photos of the band are available on the Singer Band's Web site .
Grand Picnic, Fairhope, Pa., July 4, 1916
04 Jul 2016 |
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"Picnic. There will be a grand picnic held at Fairhope, July 4, 1916. We have erected a large waxed floor for those who wish to enjoy dancing. There will be refreshments of all kinds served on the grounds. Everybody cordially invited. Kennell & Sturtz, managers."
This comes from a photo of a broadside framed under glass rather than a scan, and the quality of the image suffers a bit. "Sturtz," who was one of the managers of this "grand picnic" held on the Fourth of July one hundred years ago, was probably John W. Sturtz , who was my great-grandfather. I'm not exactly sure what "grounds" in the small town of Fairhope , Somerset County, Pennsylvania, might have been available as a venue for serving refreshments and erecting a "large wax floor" for dancing.
Mama's Cookin' 'Em
06 Sep 2021 |
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A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of cooking: outside or in .
I'm not sure what mama's cooking, but she may be preparing food for a picnic. There appear to be white cloth-covered baskets lying in the grass, with one or two baskets barely visible behind mama and another in the right midground.
"Mama cookin' 'em. Catherine Mueller."
Sent to Mr. W. S. Osgood, 410 Morris Bldg., New Orleans, La., and postmarked Kansas City, Kans., Aug. 20, 1907. There's no other message on the back.
Too Many Places to Go and Too Much to See (Rotated…
04 May 2016 |
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This rotated version makes it easier to read the handwritten message:
"We tended the Iowa Picnic here last Saturday. Saw lots of folks from Iowa that I knew. 10,000 people there. I can't tell when we will leave here. Too many places to go & too much to see to get away very soon. We expect to visit an old friend of mine that lives at Santa Ana, 30 miles south. We may move out here some time. Love to all. Goodbye, Leni & Mame"
For more information about this real photo postcard, see a full version and a cropped version of the card:
Too Many Places to Go and Too Much to See
04 May 2016 |
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Here's the message that's written on this real photo postcard (to read the original handwriting more easily, see the rotated version of the card):
"We tended the Iowa Picnic here last Saturday. Saw lots of folks from Iowa that I knew. 10,000 people there. I can't tell when we will leave here. Too many places to go & too much to see to get away very soon. We expect to visit an old friend of mine that lives at Santa Ana, 30 miles south. We may move out here some time. Love to all. Goodbye, Leni & Mame"
At first glance, it seems like Leni, Mame, and about 10,000 others attended what must have been a huge "Iowa Picnic," which presumably took place somewhere in Iowa. But what about their plans to visit a friend located thirty miles away in Santa Ana? Isn't Santa Ana a city in California?
Fortunately, the results of a Google search for Iowa Picnic and California provided the answer. I found a posting about Iowa Picnics - Long Beach and Elsewhere that gives a brief history of the get-togethers that were held beginning in 1900. So many Iowans moved to California that the picnics attracted thousands of transplanted Midwesterners--as many as 100,000 attended during some years in the 1940s!
So it sounds like Leni and Mame were enjoying their stay in California as they visited friends and met fellow Iowans at the picnic. Although there's no date on the card, I suspect they were traveling sometime in the late 1900s or early 1910s.
For additional views of the handwritten message and photo, see a rotated version and a cropped version of the card:
Labor Day Novelties Store Sign, 1922
01 Sep 2014 |
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"Labor Day Novelties. Picnic needs, auto supplies, and holiday goods. September, 1922."
A store sign that advertised special Labor Day sales in 1922.
Barbecue Man
The Umbrella Is Hardly Big Enough
16 Sep 2013 |
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Ducking under "umbrellas or parasols" over at the Vintage Photos Theme Park .
Margaret Thomas of Peoria, Illinois, sent this real photo postcard to Jane "Jennie" Klinger of State College, Pa., in 1907. The "picnic at Bradley" notation along the right-hand edge of the postcard may indicate that the photo was taken at the Bradley Polytechnic Institute (now Bradley University) in Peoria.
Peoria, Ill.
9/8/1907
Dear Jane,
The umbrella is hardly big enough for two, like you and I, but as trees grow to be very old in that country we might someplace find a kindly shade that would suffice for such a pair. Wish I could be with you all today.
Yours,
Margaret Thomas
Picnic at Bradley 9/2-1907
Addressed on the other side to:
Miss Jennie Klinger
State College Pa.
Centre Co. Care Bathgates RR
The Ghosts of Picnics Past
11 Sep 2013 |
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A real photo postcard showing a picnic scene with a ghostly double exposure.
Fort Hunter Park Service Station, Harrisburg, Pa.
24 Jun 2013 |
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"Fort Hunter Park Service Station, Wm. Penn Highway (Routes 11 and 22), 6 miles north of Harrisburg, Penna. Luncheon service in an atmosphere of dignity. Unusually complete touring camp and picnic facilities."
The Fort Hunter Park Service Station building is now part of the Fort Hunter Mansion and Park , which is a division of the Dauphin County Parks and Recreation Department .
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