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Post card from 1942. Rather racist and offensive but that's the way it was back then. Emotions and national pride ran high with all the participants of WW II but that's what it takes to win wars. Anything less and you are assured of coming in 2nd place. Tom Hanks has proven beyond all doubt he is a moron. He accuses us of being racist during WWII thereby suggesting indirectly that the Japanese were not. He forgets the Bataan death march and the massive atrocities commited by Japanese troops against the Americans, the Phillipinos, the Chinese, the English and all others they came in contact with during the war. I personally met two gentlemen who survived the Bataan death march and a Chinese lady whose family suffered under the occupation by Japanese troops. Their experiences and treatment could only be interpreted as actions driven by racism. It was not that the Japanese were bad people but that they were bombarded with pernicious propaganda. They did not have a free society where they could get alternative opinions, viewpoints, and the simple truths that would have disproved that propaganda.
From the Jones Memorial Library post card collection. location and photographer unknown.
This image is part of the RetroWeb Visual History of Lynchburg, Virginia
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Baby pelicans are seen in a rookery on Lower Klamath Lake in this 1912 photo by C.R. Miller of Klamath Falls. Excursions to view pelicans up close were a popular tourist attraction until the practice was halted in 1915 to protect bird populations.
I have some old Montgomery postcards from the early sixties.
Shortly after the Air Force turned the land over to the county.
I made a post card of the tattoo magazine that has 20% off when someone subscribe to it.
I decided to made it of halloween,and i used the colors of it, orange,black,green,white.
Post card given to Mr. August Ringquist by his son, Sam & his wife, Tilda. August Ringquist was my great-great grandfather. He was the father of Sam Ringquist, my maternal grandma's father. The card was forwarded to me by my cousin Sandy, one of John Ringquist's great-granddaughters.
WW1: "Off for the front"
This postcard is a black and white photo of soldiers marching to the front. Text at bottom left: "Off for the front". On reverse: "The Chicago Daily News/G.J. Kavanaugh/War Postal Card Department".
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A post card of the Grenada Hotel in Grenada, Mississippi from the Mississippi Department of Archives and History collection. I have no information about whether or not the building is still standing, but I think it's probably long gone.
I made these ornaments with Cassandra's new digital collage Holiday sheets, I am a member of her design team. She has lots of beautiful sheets, www.etsy.com/shop/cassiscreations and the sheet is www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=36662445. I use several layers of each print. These two cuties are my sister's grand babies.
This is the second of what will prob'ly be a series based on fabric by Kaffe Fassett....a little abstract but I think it's gettng better....;) AD wc pencils on Canson block. I got this to scan a little bigger on my scanner and I changed another setting so the colors are pretty true! Hope Sherrie likes it!
Lincoln Park Conservatory and Lily Pond, Chicago. Sent to Miss Alma Johanson in Chicago in Nov. 29, 1918.
The end of the summer season, but the fall is a great time at the beach.
Thank you SkeletalMess for the texture.
Frederick Hartmann Post Cards. Gertrude Annie Collett Collection. Post marked Leicester, 23 December 1908. From Dick (Richard Ernest Collett). Note: Richard Ernest Collett was himself a photographer. See the Photographic collection of the South Australian State Library for some examples of his work.