CONCORD, N.H. (AP) 鈥 Greetings from Concord, New Hampshire.
Postcards emblazoned with 鈥淕reetings from鈥 a state, city or tourist attraction advertise more than just the tiny scenes squeezed into 3D letters. They also reflect American innovation and idealism in both their production and popularity.
So-called large-letter postcards weren鈥檛 new when a German immigrant named Curt Teich began producing colorful linen-textured versions in the early 1930s, but he 鈥渨as kind of a genius,鈥 said Will Hansen, curator of Americana at in Chicago, home to largest public collection of Teich postcards in the United States.
Just as Henry Ford revolutionized automobile production, Teich鈥檚 company perfected a system of mass producing large-letter postcards based on the idea that no town was too small to include.
鈥淣obody had really pulled together the idea that we should just do these for everywhere, and that鈥檚 kind of a quintessentially American thing,鈥 Hansen said. 鈥淵ou take an idea, and you perfect it and you replicate it.鈥
The postcards鈥 popularity in the 1940s, 50s and 60s was fueled by an obsession with the automobile and the adventure of road travel. Teich and his imitators used saturated colors and simplified scenes to paint an enticing view of mid-20th-century America.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e very optimistic-looking,鈥 Hansen said. 鈥淭hat is sort of in tandem with how Americans are thinking about America at that time 鈥 that this is a country on an upward trajectory, that we have more money to spend, that we鈥檙e able to travel freely in ways we couldn鈥檛 before.鈥
Peter Meggison, a 76-year-old retired community college professor in Westport, Massachusetts, has 10,000 large-letter postcards in his private collection. His favorites include cards depicting his hometown of New Bedford, Massachusetts, and one from Saugatuck, Michigan, that features a vibrant artist鈥檚 palette as the background.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 the graphics that appeal to a lot of people, and they really do represent mid-20th century America, which is really quite nice,鈥 he said.
For non-collectors, sending the postcards to friends and family was an inexpensive way to show off their travel. Today, travelers pose in front of murals around the country that mimic the vintage postcards and share photos on social media. Last year, the Newberry helped The Eagles create a background of gigantic postcard images at the Sphere in Las Vegas for the classic rock band鈥檚 performance of 鈥淭ake it Easy.鈥
Says Hansen: 鈥淓ven if folks in that crowd weren鈥檛 alive at the time when these were being distributed, everybody knows them.”
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Part of a recurring series, 鈥淎merican Objects,鈥 marking the 250th anniversary of the United States. For more stories on the anniversary, click .
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