Old Postcards
by Wayne
Mattox
Two
Philadelphians, J. P. Charlton and H. L. Limpan, came up with a
simple but great idea in 1861. Their "Lipman's Postal Card" had
a blank front for writing messages. The back was inscribed with
three lines-one with their patent mark, the other two for
addressing and stamping. They advertised their product was
great for sending rapid correspondence at half the price of
paper and envelopes. They claimed their invention would be
valuable for travelers, and boasted merchants could use their
stiff cards to send notices and circulars. The Post Card, they
deduced, would lighten mail, cheapen postage, and surely make
them rich. It did not. Good ideas alone do not make one
wealthy. It is reasonable to assume that the Lipman Postal Card
was a flop, for only a few have been found, and its inventors
are all but forgotten.
History
records that postcards originated in Austria in 1869. A year
later they were officially issued in Great Britain with a
halfpenny stamp printed in the corner. Public demand was so
great police were dispatched at post offices to control crowds.
By 1871, almost two million 3.5" by 4.5" post cards were mailed
in Europe each week. In 1894, mailing a card with an adhesive
stamp was allowed. In 1897 the card's width was increased by an
inch so that half the address side could be used for
correspondence. This left the face side free to be decorated by
photographs and early artistic prints called
"chromolithographs." Within three years, sending and
collecting "picture postcards" was the craze in England and
other parts of Europe. By 1905 card collecting had reached
comparable proportions in the United States. The glory years of
the picture post card continued until W.W.I. In recent years,
the hobby has returned stronger than ever.
Although US
postal regulations first allowed postcards in 1872, most found
today date after 1910. The amount of postage can help date an
American mailed card. Cards mailed from 1872-1958 cost 1 or 2
cents. In 1959, the rate went up to 3 cents, and continuing
climbing thereafter. As with most antique categories, age is
only one factor in evaluating old post cards. Other
considerations are condition, artistic quality, manufacturer,
and probably most important of all-subject
matter.
Suppose
you're one of the first ones in at a tag sale. You have
twenty-five dollars in your pocket. The place is all junk
except for a banana box with a sign on it reading, "Old Post
Cards-$5 Each!" You want to try your luck. Which ones
should you choose? My first suggestion is, forget value. Buy
cards that are interesting to you. Almost every town was
pictured in old postcards. A historic picture of your home
town, or something to do with your profession, or favorite
hobby-certainly, those wall hangers would be worth five bucks.
Besides something dear to you, select older cards, pre 1918 if
you can find them. Then, look for cards that fit within a hot
category. Christmas, Easter, Halloween and Valentines Day cards
are much sought after. Greeting cards are not as valuable. An
old card picturing the First Methodist Church of Cochran,
Georgia is worth about fifty cents, while a post card
advertising St. Andrews Golf Course might fetch a hundred
dollars. More than any other antique, postcards are collected
by category. Advertising, Movie Star, Aviation, Nudes, Signed
artist, Dogs, Fire, African American, Political-all these
subjects hold peoples' interest. Choose old graphic cards like
these, and you might just find a bargain in a banana
box.
by AntiqueTalk.com
Reprinted with
permission Copyright by Wayne Mattox
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