“A Photograph of Baby Helen” – circa 1910

Sometime around 1910, a photographic portrait was made of a baby girl.

The full view suggests that the photograph was not made in a studio.

The baby seems to be sitting on a blanket that has been draped over an armchair.

The very young girl is wearing a long white dress or christening gown.

She looks at the world with an expression of wonderment and, possibly, bewilderment.

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Despite our desire to know more about the child, the lack of full name, date, or studio mark, makes it impossible to tell a fuller postcard story.

On the reverse, a thoughtful person has identified the child as “Baby Helen”

The writer notes that Baby Helen is wearing her “Great -Grandpa’s dress”.

The writer laments that “it is a poor picture”.

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Had the writer identified Baby Helen with a surname (and added a date and a location), the portrait would be much more valuable to those who see it a century later.

I have mounted the soapbox numerous times to remind readers that their pictures will outlive them – and that everyone who now recognizes a familiar family name (like “Baby Helen”) is likely to have vanished within a hundred years.

One hopes that Helen grew up with love and security, and that she enjoyed a happy and successful life in the 20th century.

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