Greetings from Baltimore
Scenes of the City's Colorful Postcard Past
Bert Smith(Author)
Johns Hopkins University Press
Published on 25. October 1996
Book
Hardback
96 pages
978-0-8018-5534-4 (ISBN)
Description
Handpainted in soft colors, postmarks still visible, old postcards offer views of scenes both familiar and removed. Like family photographs, they evoke memories of a happy time gone by and like family photographs, they remind us of what's changed. Collecting more than 158 richly colored postcards from the past, 'Greetings from Baltimore' provides an entertaining, nostalgic, occasionally ironic, always changing view of the best of Baltimore, from about 1905 to 1955. Here are steamboats along the old Pratt Street piersthe inner harbor that H. L.
Mencken remembered as "so rotten, it smelled like a billion polecats"; the now defunct department stores at Howard and Lexington Streets; the Italianate Bromo Seltzer tower topped with the revolving blue bottle that had to be removed in 1936; the Patterson Park pagoda; the Shot Tower; Memorial Stadium in its shiny 1954 modernity and old, wooden Municipal Stadium, its predecessor; well-known restaurants and bars that have disappeared, like the famous Miller Brothers, Jimmy Wu's New China Inn, and Benny's, shown here full of servicemen and girls in 1945; long-gone amusement parks like Gwynn Oak, Carlin's, and the earlier Electric Park; and, of course, the Block. "Creatively colored and not simply reproduced from photographs, old postcards are genuine pieces of American folk art. More than that, they are reminders of a world that no longer exists. Many sites shown here, like the old Baltimore Post Office, are long gone, and the city is poorer for their loss. Others, like Camden Station, have been resurrected and adapted to new uses. Whether you have deep roots in this wonderful city, or are visiting it for the first time, I bring you 'Greetings from Baltimore'--'from the Preface'
Mencken remembered as "so rotten, it smelled like a billion polecats"; the now defunct department stores at Howard and Lexington Streets; the Italianate Bromo Seltzer tower topped with the revolving blue bottle that had to be removed in 1936; the Patterson Park pagoda; the Shot Tower; Memorial Stadium in its shiny 1954 modernity and old, wooden Municipal Stadium, its predecessor; well-known restaurants and bars that have disappeared, like the famous Miller Brothers, Jimmy Wu's New China Inn, and Benny's, shown here full of servicemen and girls in 1945; long-gone amusement parks like Gwynn Oak, Carlin's, and the earlier Electric Park; and, of course, the Block. "Creatively colored and not simply reproduced from photographs, old postcards are genuine pieces of American folk art. More than that, they are reminders of a world that no longer exists. Many sites shown here, like the old Baltimore Post Office, are long gone, and the city is poorer for their loss. Others, like Camden Station, have been resurrected and adapted to new uses. Whether you have deep roots in this wonderful city, or are visiting it for the first time, I bring you 'Greetings from Baltimore'--'from the Preface'
Reviews / Votes
"Reproductions of hand-tinted cards and a witty companion text wrap Baltimore history and postcard-art history into a series of engaging vignettes."--'Baltimore Magazine'"The most fervent Baltimorean or postcard fan should delight in what he finds here. But the images are also bittersweet, often acting as reminders of what we have lost. Amusement parks. Route 40 motels out of the 'It Happened One Night' period. An Inner Harbor surrounded by smoking packet and excursion boats. Steam trains, railroad stations, schools, monuments, and parks spill over the pages."--'Baltimore Sun'More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Baltimore, MD
United States
Illustrations
158 color illus., 5 b&w illus.
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 280 mm
Weight
612 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8018-5534-4 (9780801855344)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Bert Smith is a graphic designer who has worked in print and television for 25 years. He teaches in the graduate program in publications design at the University of Baltimore. Smith has been the recipient of design and typography awards from the New York Art Director's Club, 'Print' Magazine, the American Institute of Graphic Arts, 'Graphic Design: USA', and the Printing Industries of America.