Thomas Balch Library
Thomas Balch Library© 2006 By Thomas Balch Library. All rights reserved.
Processed by: Emily E. Holmes
Collection open for research.
No physical characteristics affect use of this material.
Historical Postcards, 1900-1980 (VC 004), Thomas Balch Library, Leesburg, VA.
Ethel Littlejohn Adams, Leesburg, VA; Emory Plaster, Leesburg, VA; unknown.
Digital reproductions
1988.0001, 1991.0002, 1995.0039X, 2013.0098, 2013.0169
Processed by Emily E. Holmes, 27 July 2007.
Postcards developed out of the complex tradition of nineteenth-century printed calling cards, beginning with the advent of the Cartes-de-Visite in France. In the 1850s, Parisian photographer Andre Adolphe Eugene Disderi invented a photographic process involving egg white, albumen, and silver nitrate to create inexpensive portraits on paper cards. These photographic Cartes-de-Visites were 2 1/2 by 4 inches and became a popular, collectable form of "visiting cards" world-wide. Photographers would reprint portraits of famous individuals they had taken at their studios or during travel and sell them as collectable cards. Public figures such as European royalty, military generals, doctors, and businessmen would pose for Cartes-de-Visite portraits that were used as trading cards, business cards, and advertisements. During the American Civil War such cards were taxed, with revenue stamps affixed to the back.
Postcards as we know them now first began in 1861 as cards mailed by private post, invented by American John P. Charlton of Philadelphia with the patent later transferred to Philadelphian H. L. Lipman. Prussian postman Heinrich von Stephan advocated government-issued postcards in 1865. In 1869 the first government-created postal cards were printed in Hungary and the first cards for private post were printed in Austria. In the 1870s picture postcards grew in popularity throughout the United States, Britain, Europe, and Japan. China created regulations for postcards in 1896 and began printing them in 1898.
In 1873 the United States Government began to issue the only postal cards legal in the U.S., of plain card stock with no artistic design on the front. On 19 May 1898, Congress passed the Private Mailing Act, which allowed the mailing of privately printed post cards marked "Private Mailing Card." Only this designation, the address, and the stamp were permitted on the back; any message had to be written over the artwork which publishers printed on the front of the card. The Act also reduced the postage rate for the cards from the two cent letter rate to one cent. Beginning on 24 December 1901, relaxed regulations authorized private printers in the United States to drop "Private Mailing Card" in favor of "Post Card" or "Postcard."
During the "Undivided Back" period printers began to leave white space on the front of the card where the sender could write a message without spoiling the artwork (see VC 0004_3000). Cards were first permitted to have a "Divided Back," with text written on the left half of a dividing line and the address on the right half, beginning in England in 1902. France switched to a divided back in 1904, Germany in 1905, and the United States on 1 March 1907 (VC 0004_3025).
Around 1900 the first postcards made of "Real Photos" rather than artwork began to circulate, aided in by advances in amateur photography equipment by companies such as Kodak. Kodak also introduced postcard paper for photographic development and photography studios began to offer portraits printed as postcards (see VC 0004_2504). Many local town, countryside, and architectural images were captured during this period by local photographers, then printed and sold as postcards (see VC 0004_1708).
The loosening of government regulation, lowered costs, and advances in amateur photography all contributed to a postcard craze that lasted from 1900 to the First World War. Postcards were the preferred means to send a quick note, whether across town or across a continent. U.S. postal records for fiscal year 1907-1908 indicate over 677 million postcards mailed.
German printers' fine artwork and superior processes allowed Germany to dominate the market until the outbreak of war in 1914 (see VC 0004_3017). European printers opened offices in the United States and postcard artists moved to Germany. When war halted the flow of high-quality German cards, English and American producers attempted to fill market demand. Their processes, however, resulted in cards of inferior quality. From the War to 1930 cards were printed with a white border around the edge to bring down high printing costs by saving ink (see VC 0004_3038). Lower quality contributed to the demise of postcard mania.
Although new linen paper processes in the 1930s resulted in better quality, more brightly colored card art (see VC 0004_3037), the postcard industry continued to decline. After 1939, new Photochromes, color photo postcards, began to replace both linen and black and white photo postcards (see VC 0004_0200). By the end of World War II these "Chromes" had completely replaced other card forms. The widely available telephone replaced the postcard for sending short messages and postcards became largely confined to the realm of souvenirs (see VC 0004_0600). Though postcards continue to be produced, they would never regain the enormous popularity of the early twentieth century.
The majority of the approximately 170 postcards in the collection fall between 1901 and World War I and are Undivided Back or early Divided Back cards. The bulk of the remaining postcards fall between World War I and the end of World War II, including several examples of linen paper cards. The remaining postcards are Photochrome cards from the 1970s or 80s.
The primary subject matter of the postcards is scenes from around Loudoun County, although there are images from surrounding Virginia counties and several cards related to Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. Buildings, images of nature, and well-known streets figure prominently. Leesburg is the location most covered, including many images of Market Street, King Street, and the Loudoun County Courthouse.
Geographic
0100 Ashburn 0200 Ashby's Gap 0300 Berryville 0400 Bluemont 0500 Charles Town, WV 0600 Dulles 0700 Elvan 0800 Georgetown 0900 Hamilton 1000 Harpers Ferry, WV 1100 Hillsboro 1200 Lexington 1300 Lincoln 1400 Luray 1500 Natural Bridge 1600 Paeonian Springs 1700 Purcellville 1800 Red Hill 1900 Round Hill 2000 Ryan 2100 Shenandoah Valley & National Park 2200 Staunton 2300 Waterford 2400 Historic memorabilia 2500 Portraits 2600 Lucketts 2700 Middleburg 3000 LeesburgAmerican Postcard Art.Com Inc.: About Postcards by Phil Neigh.
Emotions Greeting Cards/VH Productions: The History of Postcards by Vivian Krug , 2003. http://www.emotionscards.com/museum/historyofpostcards.htm (accessed 1 Aug 2007)
Hemsath, DiAnna. Postcards: Penn College Girls. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Archives, 2006. http://www.archives.upenn.edu/memorabilia/postcards/collegegirls.html (accessed 1 August 2007)
Lisa's Postcard Page: A Brief History of Postcard Types by Stefano Neis. http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/2487/pchistory.htm (accessed 1 August 2007)
Postcards as Face to Face: A Brief History of the Postcard by Chien-chun Tsao, 1998. http://www.post-card.net/history.html (accessed 1 August 2007)
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American Postcard Art.Com Inc.: About Postcards by Phil Neigh.
Emotions Greeting Cards/VH Productions: The History of Postcards by Vivian Krug , 2003. http://www.emotionscards.com/museum/historyofpostcards.htm (accessed 1 Aug 2007)
Hemsath, DiAnna. Postcards: Penn College Girls. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Archives, 2006. http://www.archives.upenn.edu/memorabilia/postcards/collegegirls.html (accessed 1 August 2007)
Lisa's Postcard Page: A Brief History of Postcard Types by Stefano Neis. http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/2487/pchistory.htm (accessed 1 August 2007)
Postcards as Face to Face: A Brief History of the Postcard by Chien-chun Tsao, 1998. http://www.post-card.net/history.html (accessed 1 August 2007)