
“Traveling to the Continent” – The Calais Steamer (circa 1910)
Before the days of the “Chunnel” and the fleets of huge catamarans that depart from Folkestone, an English person traveling to the Continent would take
Before the days of the “Chunnel” and the fleets of huge catamarans that depart from Folkestone, an English person traveling to the Continent would take
Mrs. D. T. Rinehart lived in Millers, the small community around a depot(Millers Station) in northern Carrol County, Maryland. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millers,_Maryland We recently saw another postcard
Mr. John A. Hedges lived in Stockton, a small city in Cedar County of southwest Missouri. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockton,_Missouri In July of 1915, John received a postcard
Mrs. W. M. Fulton lived in Rowlandville, now a census-designated place near the community of Conowingo in Cecil County of north-central Maryland. Near the Susquehanna
Master Kinnard McCleary was growing up in Hagerstown, a commercial and transportation hub for the panhandle of western Maryland. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagerstown,_Maryland From other postcard stories, we
Miss Helen Seasholtz was in Millstone, a small borough on the Millstone River of Somerset County in central New Jersey. Originally known as “Somerset Courthouse”,
Mr. Paul Baker lived on a rural delivery route outside of in Winchester, a village in Adams County of southwest Ohio. (In 1910, Winchester had
Miss Addie Luster lived in Vicksburg, the historic city on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi River in the west-central portion of the State of Mississippi.
Tellings stories from the past.