Alan Mays' photos with the keyword: religious ephemera
Get Right with God at the Anderson Campaign Tabern…
27 Feb 2023 |
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A Vintage Photos Theme Park photo for the theme of church, chapel, or any other religious building .
Caption: "Get Right with God." Painted on the side of the building: "Anderson Campaign Ta[bernacle]."
This is a real photo postcard with a photomontage consisting of five giant heads peering over the top of a large wooden building. "Get Right with God" is the admonition at the top, and the sign on the building identifies it as the "Anderson Campaign Tabernacle."
I also have a second copy of this card that has the name of a photographer -- "D. W. Faulk, 7 Second Ave., Coatesville, Pa." -- embossed on it.
A different version of this real photo postcard that I spotted online is captioned, "Be Sure Your Sins Will Find You Out," with the location given as "Coatesville, Pa." On the back of all three of the photo postcards is a Noko stamp box design (with "NOKO" on all four sides) that indicates a time frame ranging from 1907 to 1929.
After some searching, I discovered that "Anderson" refers to George Wood Anderson, a minister who ran some of his first large-scale revival meetings in a tabernacle building in Coatesville, Pennsylvania, in 1914. As reported in the Christian Advocate , December 3, 1914, p. 36:
"The Rev. George Wood Anderson, pastor of Elm Park Church, Scranton, Pa., has been conducting for six weeks an evangelistic campaign at Coatesville, Pa., an industrial town of 11,000 people. The service has been carried on in a tabernacle specially constructed. The local paper tabulates results, showing total attendance 140,700, with 2,208 conversions.... Beginning next spring, Dr Anderson will leave the regular pastorate, to devote his life to evangelism, in obedience to an impulse which he has long felt."
A later photo of the "George Wood Anderson Evangelistic Party" appeared in the Christian Workers Magazine , May 1916, p. 712, and allowed me to identify some of the giant heads on this photo card. That's George Wood Anderson himself on the left, his wife Nellie Anderson next to him, and Miss Agnes Smith, director of women's work, in the middle. The man on the right is Carl Leonard, business manager, but I haven't been able to determine who the man next to him is.
George Wood Anderson went on to build tabernacles in other states to continue his revival campaigns. A recent Facebook posting by the Logan County History Center , for instance, describes his evangelistic services and provides photos of tabernacles in Bellefontaine and Belle Center, Ohio.
Bank of Merit, 20 Shares of Stock
08 Feb 2021 |
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A nineteenth-century reward of merit.
Bank of Merit
20 Shares of Stock to the Holder
God offers reward, my Teacher does the same--they both encourage me. I tried, and success crowned my efforts.
Harry Lightcap, Pupil. Benjamin Rich, Teacher.
20. XX.
Vacation Bible School, St. John's Lutheran Church,…
07 Sep 2020 |
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A detail from a photo of the participants in a vacation Bible school at St. John's Lutheran Church in Slatington, Pennsylvania, in 1936.The children in the top half of the image look like giants compared to the ones in the lower half, which makes it obvious that this is a montage of two or more different photos.
For the full real photo postcard, see Vacation Bible School, St. John's Lutheran Church, Slatington, Pa., July 1, 1936 .
Vacation Bible School, St. John's Lutheran Church,…
07 Sep 2020 |
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A religious photo for the Vintage Photos Theme Park.
"St. John's Lutheran Church, 12th Daily Vacation Bible School, 7-1-36, Slatington, Pa."
A real photo postcard of the children and adults who participated in a vacation Bible school at St. John's Lutheran Church in Slatington , Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, on July 1, 1936. It wasn't until I attempted to count the number of people in the photo—there are about 215—that I realized that this is a montage combining two or more images. A close-up of part of the photo makes the montage obvious.
Cyanotype Woman with May 1908 Calendar
16 Jan 2020 |
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Handwritten note on the other side of this calendar: "Ida Massimore. For faithful attendance at Sunday School. From your teacher, Mrs. E. W. Gregory."
Mrs. Gregory is wearing a cross necklace in the blue-tinted cyanotype photo on this calendar, which she used as an attendance reward for her Sunday school students.
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.
Stoverdale Camp, Season Meal Ticket, 1932
26 Mar 2018 |
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"Stoverdale Camp. Season Ticket (Whole). M________. Not transferable. Present ticket at each meal."
A meal ticket dated 1932 by the dealer I bought it from. This was evidently printed for use at the Stoverdale Camp Meeting grounds that were located near Hummelstown in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.
For more examples of meal tickets, see Wallace Hotel Meal Ticket, Harrisburg, Pa. , The Lee House Meal Ticket , and Meal Ticket Good Only at Circle Bar, Reading, Pa. (below).
New Year Greeting, 1912
01 Jan 2018 |
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Rev. B. L. C. Baer was the pastor of the Highspire Church of God in Highspire, Pa.
New Year Greeting, 1912
Being deprived the privilege of coming into your home I still herewith extend to you the greetings of the season.
My good wishes for your happiness and success are not limited to a day or a week--they continue throughout the year; but at this joyous Christmas and New Year season I gladly renew and emphasize my good wishes, and as I count my blessings I find your good will among those most highly prized.
B. L. C. Baer, Highspire, Pa.
Bell Shares Certificate, Third Moravian Church Sun…
27 Jun 2017 |
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The Sunday school of the Third Moravian Church of Philadelphia used share certificates like this to raise funds for the purchase of a church bell. The sale of all 2,500 shares at 10 cents each would have raised $250, and perhaps that would have covered the cost of a bell in the 1870s, which is when these certificates were issued.
For another nineteenth-century fundraising strategy that involved buying bricks rather than shares, see The Owner of This Card Has Purchased One Brick in the People's Church, Boston, Mass., ca. 1880 (below).
Third Moravian Church Sunday School, Harrowgate, Philadelphia.
2,500 shares. 10 cents each.
This is to certify that John Diehne is entitled to one shares in the bell of the Third Moravian Church at Harrogate, Philadelphia.
Chas. Thieley, president.
J. Lietz, secretary,
Senseman & Son, Printers, 416 Callowhill Street, Philadelphia.
Peach Festival Ticket, Second Reformed Church, Rea…
17 May 2017 |
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Peach Festival
Sponsored by the Women's Guild of Second Reformed Church, 45 South Sixth Street, Saturday, September 13, 1952, 4:00 to 8:00 p.m.
Baked ham supper, peaches and ice cream, novelties, cake and candy. Tickets good for anything on sale. Tickets - 10 cents. No. 3623.
It Biteth Like a Serpent and Stingeth Like an Adde…
12 Feb 2015 |
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"At last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder. Prov. 23-32."
The verses that proceed this one in the Book of Proverbs place this quoted Bible verse in context and make it clear that this colorful Victorian-era card was intended as a temperance message: "Who hath woe? who hath sorrow? who hath contentions? who hath babbling? who hath wounds without cause? who hath redness of eyes? They that tarry long at the wine; they that go to seek mixed wine. Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth his colour in the cup, when it moveth itself aright. At the last it biteth like a serpent, and stingeth like an adder." (Proverbs 23:29-32.)
At the same time, the handwritten notation on the back of the card (see below) reveals that it also served as an attendance reward for a student who only missed a few days of instruction during the 1893-1894 school year.
Handwritten on the back of this card:
Katie Whitmyer, Mar. 22, 1894.
School Opened - 120
Days Attended - 115½
Days Missed - 4½
L. S. Sahm, teacher
Next Sunday Is Rally Day
19 Jul 2016 |
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The inside of a Rally Day Treasure Chest , which has a postcard backing. Mouse over the image to see the closed (folded) treasure chest .
Next Sunday is Rally Day
The day of 100% attendance in our school. We must have you present to make our goal! Let's make our school better than ever!
The contents of the treasure chest are all for you: The Book of Books. A Place of Prayer. A Place of Song. A Happy Place. God Is Here! Helpful Friends. Truth and Honor Taught Here. Golden Hours.
Our Rally Day Treasure Chest
19 Jul 2016 |
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A folded die-cut Rally Day postcard. Mouse over the Rally Day Treasure Chest to open it and see what's inside .
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