1876 Telegram to Singer "Send Wagons"
#12
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Sonoma County, CA
Posts: 4,299
Old penmanship always blows me away. What a neat little scrap of history...such a seemingly inconsequential piece of paper, amazing for it to have survived for so long.
Future generations will have very little from our times...digital bits and bytes just don't hang around the same way as paper ephemera does. Taco Bell receipts and junk mail will be about it.
Future generations will have very little from our times...digital bits and bytes just don't hang around the same way as paper ephemera does. Taco Bell receipts and junk mail will be about it.
#13
Super Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 8,091
Speaking of technology, the pen that telegram was written with was a dip pen. No cartridges, no internal ink capacity, just dip it and write. Early fountain pens were filled with an eye dropper. It took until the late 19teens for a workable filling mechanism to be perfected so the pen could be filled from a bottle without an eye dropper.
I also find it interesting that wagons continued to be used for local freight up until the 1920s or so as well. Motorized trucks were really not common or reliable until after WW I.
Joe
I also find it interesting that wagons continued to be used for local freight up until the 1920s or so as well. Motorized trucks were really not common or reliable until after WW I.
Joe
#17
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: San Lorenzo, CA
Posts: 5,361
Well, it arrived yesterday in great shape.
Anyone here care to help me decipher the names on this? ( I now have a good resolution color scan if need be)
I am hoping to determine who is sending "instruments" to the three singer factories. If I can get the name, I may be able to match it to a company, and then i'd at least have an idea of what "instruments" they might have been.
Anyone here care to help me decipher the names on this? ( I now have a good resolution color scan if need be)
I am hoping to determine who is sending "instruments" to the three singer factories. If I can get the name, I may be able to match it to a company, and then i'd at least have an idea of what "instruments" they might have been.
#19
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: San Lorenzo, CA
Posts: 5,361
Well that helps with part of it already!!
S.A. Bennett is mentioned in a footnote here
"Singer Manufacturing Company Records, 1850-Ca.1975. (Madison, WI.: Wisconsin Historical Society) S.A. Bennett to Clem Studebaker 16JUL85"
In 1868 after the Civil War, Singer established a factory in South Bend, managed by Leighton Pine, to manufacture cabinets.
Part way there!!
S.A. Bennett is mentioned in a footnote here
"Singer Manufacturing Company Records, 1850-Ca.1975. (Madison, WI.: Wisconsin Historical Society) S.A. Bennett to Clem Studebaker 16JUL85"
In 1868 after the Civil War, Singer established a factory in South Bend, managed by Leighton Pine, to manufacture cabinets.
Part way there!!
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