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Wish You Were Here: Postcards of
Laurel
February 6 - December 21, 2005
Using
postcards from the turn of the 20th Century to today, visitors saw
how a community changed and grew through the postcards of businesses,
churches, schools, hospitals and other institutions from Laurel and
nearby areas along Rt. 1 in Howard County and Ft. Meade Road in Anne
Arundel County.
A section called
“Laurel Remembered” featured buildings, and views that had disappeared
or significantly changed over the years, including Rt. 1
vistas and businesses such as the Cloverleaf Inn and the Laurel
Sanitarium, the Laurel Mill and the Academy of Music.
Another
section of the exhibition on Main Street offered visitors a chance to
experience buildings that they can still see today from the Laurel
Museum itself down to the B&O Railroad Station. A section on
publicity postcards reminded us that “Direct Mail” is not new, and showed
how as early as 1924 (Red Wing Theatre Program) companies and
businesses, and even physicians used postcards tell the public about
who they were, and what they did, and announces their schedules and
services. There was also a special section on the Laurel Race Track.
Visitors
to Wish You Were Here learned not only about Laurel history, but
also the history of postcards, which were first developed around
1893-98, including how they evolved and have been used in the last
century. Laurel had a very early postcard specialist, photographer Bert
Sadler, and his circa 1907 wooden and brass plates of postcards, and
his original cameras werel on display. The exhibit was curated by
Laurel Museum Director Elsie Klumpner.
Other LHS exhibits:
Stories from
the Attic: Ten Years of Collecting - Feb. 2006-2007
Over Here: Life in Laurel During WWII
George
Nye & His Diaries
Laurel School Room and
Samplers
A Laurel Founder's
Life ~ Horace Capron |