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P&RRR Railroad Depot Reading PA Antique Vintage Postcard PC View DB For Sale


P&RRR Railroad Depot Reading PA Antique Vintage Postcard PC View DB
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P&RRR Railroad Depot Reading PA Antique Vintage Postcard PC View DB:
$7.50

ITEM:This is a antique postcard PC showing a view of P&RRR Depot, Reading, PA. Good shape, DB, written on but not posted.
SHIPPING:All buyers agree to pay calculated shipping charges. We will gladly combine shipments to help save you postage. If forces you to pay for each item individually we will refund the excess postage when we ship. If you have special packaging requirements, please contact us BEFORE paying so the shipping charge can be adjusted. Postcards/snapshots are shipped in envelopes (over $20 shipped in cardboard sleeves) and books are shipped in bubble mailers (over $30 shipped in a box).
HISTORY: Brief history of postcards in the United States ~ Postcards had a long pre-history before they hit it big, but their breakout came in 1893 as the first picture postcard was created to advertise the World Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Shortly thereafter the United States government, via the United States Postal Service, allowed printers for the first time to publish a 1-cent postcard (the \"Penny Postcard\"). A correspondent\'s writing was allowed only on the front side of these cards. 1901 brought cards with the word \"Post Card\" printed on the reverse (the side without the picture). Written messages were still restricted to the front side, with the entire back dedicated to the address. This \"undivided back\" is what gives this postcard era its name. The \"divided back\" card, with space for a message on the address side, came into use in the United States in 1907. Thus began the Golden Age of American postcards, which lasted until about 1915, when World War I blocked the import of the fine German-printed cards whose quality was unmatched in America. The \"white border\" era, named for obvious reasons, lasted from about 1916 to 1930. The \"linen card\" era lasted from about 1930 to 1945, when cards were primarily printed on papers with a high rag content. The last and current postcard era, which began about 1939, is the \"photochrome\" or \"chrome\" era. The images on these cards are generally based on colored photographs, and they are readily identified by the glossy appearance given by the paper\'s coating.


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Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011