Showing posts with label Lives.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lives.. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Vintage Grocery Store Displays


Interior of the John Thompson Grocery Company store on 15th Street in Denver, Colorado. Butchers in white coats and aprons pose around a display of deer carcasses that are decorated with Christmas wreaths and garland. Signs read: "Mocha and Java, The Best Coffee Grown", "Ou[r] Home Ma[de] Cand[ies] Are Th[e] Best Made." 1900-1910, photo by Harry M. Rhoads [link]


Interior view of the Save-A-Nickel Store at 4210 Tennyson Street, in Denver, Colorado; shows stacked cans, fruit, and advertising signs: "Sunbrite Cleanser." May 21, 1940, Rocky Mountain Photo Company [link]


Sunkist Grocery Store display, 1940s [link]


Kraft displays, Jenkins' Groceteria, Calgary, Alberta. c. 1945 [link]


Mayfair Supermarket Cookie Display, 1950's [link]


Arrowhead Drinking Water, 1950's [link]


Libby's Canned Food Display, 1950's [link]


Bon Ami Jet Spray Display, 1950's [link]


Bell Chips Circus Display, 1956 [link]


Bell Chips Display, Shopping Bag in Upland CA, 1950s [link]


Man reaching for a box in a display at Cozart's Supermarket. Aug 11, 1965, Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) [link]


Duke's Mayonnaise jars assembled in a display at Cozart's grocery store. Feb 1965, Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) [link]


Coca-Cola Supermarket Display [link]


Marlboro Supermarket Display, Ralph's Supermarket [link]

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For more vintage supermarket photos see:
Groceteria [link]
DC Grocery [link]
Vintage Supermarket Photos @ the World of Mr. Toast [link]

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Pictures of Life and Character in New York (1877)

Illustrations from the book published by G.W. Averell & Co in New York, 1877.



Page 8 - Venues for Horses


Page 9 - Theatrics


Page 10 - Fashions of the Day


Page 11 - Boxing


Page 12 - Earning a Living


Page 13 - Chinese Quarters


Page 14 - The diversity of people in New York City


Page 15 - Characters of New York


Page 16 - Street Peddlers


Page 17 - Service personnel


Page 21 - "Our artist in the United States - XI. Wall Street, New York."


Page 26 - "Night on the East side. A dime lodging house."


Page 29 - "The Prohibition movement. The drug store of the future."


Page 30 - The duty that lies near. Puck. "The new parks are a good thing, Mr. Grace, but suppose we begin by making 'breathing-places' of these dirty streets!"

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All images are from the History of Medicine Digital Collection [link]
more info on the book "Pictures of Life and Character in New York" [link]
worldcat results [link]

Sunday, April 12, 2009

"Dying Speeches" Execution Broadsides

"Just as programs are sold at sporting events today, broadsides -- styled at the time as "Last Dying Speeches" or "Bloody Murders" -- were sold to the audiences that gathered to witness public executions in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain. These ephemeral publications were intended for the middle or lower classes, and most sold for a penny or less. Published in British towns and cities by printers who specialized in this type of street literature, a typical example features an illustration (usually of the criminal, the crime scene, or the execution); an account of the crime and (sometimes) the trial; and the purported confession of the criminal, often cautioning the reader in doggerel verse to avoid the fate awaiting the perpetrator." -from Harvard Law Digital Collection [link]



The Trial and execution of John Holloway, for the murder and dismemberment of his wife, Celia (1831)





Trial and execution of François Benjamin Courvoisier, for the murder of Lord William Russell (1840)



Trial and execution of James May, Thos Williams, and John Bishop, for the murder of Carlo Ferrier (1831)




The trial, confession and execution of John and Eliz. Smith, for the murder of their daughter Mary Ann Smith (1812)


The trial and execution of James Hill and John Reeves, for the murder of John Richardson (1834)


Trial and execution of William Johnson for the murder of Benjamin Danby (1832)



The trial and execution of the Bristol Rioters, five to be executed and nineteen to be transported for life. (1832)


Trial and execution of Captain William Moir for the murder of William Malcomb (1830)


"Heart-rending execution of Fanny Amlett : a grazier's daughter, near Scarborough, who was basely seduced from home by a naval officer, who broughther to disgrace, and then deserted her. She became pregnant, ... in a fit of despair, and scarce knowing what she did, she drowned her new-born babe: for which she was brought to trial, and executed." (1813)


"Execution and confession of W. Corder : for the murder of Mary Martin in the red barn" (1828)




Trial and execution of Hunt and J. Thurtell : for the horrid murder of Mr. Weare (1823)



"The execution of Wm Cundle and John Smith for High Treason"


-See the whole fascinating collection of Dying Speeches & Bloody Murders: Crime Broadsides at the Harvard Law Digital Collection [link]
-more information and links can be found at The Proceedings of Old Bailey: London's Central Criminal Court, 1674 to 1913 [link]
 
*please cite or link when reposting*