Greetings from San Antonio: Historic Postcards of the Alamo City

Greetings from San Antonio: Historic Postcards of the Alamo City

by Lewis F. Fisher
Greetings from San Antonio: Historic Postcards of the Alamo City

Greetings from San Antonio: Historic Postcards of the Alamo City

by Lewis F. Fisher

Hardcover

$29.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Greetings from San Antonio: Historic Postcards of the Alamo City is a collection of more than six hundred color and black-and-white photo postcards, many of them quite rare, that yield a compelling visual narrative of the city in the early twentieth century, when postcards were at their height of popularity. Presented unaltered and accompanied by concise descriptive text, the postcards provide a distinctive visual portrait of a captivating and unique city during the early years of its transformation into the multicultural mecca it is today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781595349187
Publisher: Trinity University Press
Publication date: 04/01/2020
Pages: 232
Sales rank: 1,049,923
Product dimensions: 8.60(w) x 11.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Lewis F. Fisher is the author of numerous books about San Antonio and Texas, including Greetings from San Antonio: Historic Postcards of the Alamo City, American Venice: The Epic Story of San Antonio’s River, Saving San Antonio: The Preservation of a Heritage, Maverick: The American Name That Became a Legend, Chili Queens, Hay Wagons, and Fandangos, and The Spanish Plazas in Frontier San Antonio. He has received numerous local, state, and national writing awards and was named a Texas Preservation Hero by the San Antonio Conservation Society in 2014.

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

As postcard images of San Antonio began landing in mailboxes across the country at the dawn of the twentieth century, they displayed the wealth and prosperity of a city vastly different from the San Antonio of only two decades before.
Gone were oxen hauling covered wagons down dusty thoroughfares lined with vernacular homes and shops. Now automobiles sped down paved streets past fashionable multi-story buildings. Sun-baked mud that once surfaced the old Spanish plazas was replaced by flowers and landscaped gardens. Lantern-lit tables of chili queens preparing fast foods in markets bustling with carts and wagons had nearly vanished.
San Antonio was fortunate in spreading word of its new-found growth and modernity at the very moment picture postcards began sweeping the nation. In 1900 its population of 53,000 bested Dallas to make San Antonio the largest city in Texas, and would quadruple to keep it that for the next three decades. San Antonio suddenly was as impressive as other American cities, with large public buildings, busy railroad stations, plush hotels, thriving department stores and rows of handsome mansions lining broad streets. But in the heart of the new development the famed Alamo was still there, allowing boosters to instantly identify San Antonio to the rest of the nation as “the Alamo City.”
[0.1]
Unsung heroes in the postcard boom were those who delivered the postcards, like this postman, identified as Tom, shown making the rounds of a new San Antonio neighborhood with his horse-drawn cart about 1905.
German printers were flooding European markets with inexpensive but high-quality postcards, using color lithography techniques they had perfected in the late nineteenth century. American publishers, including many from San Antonio, began sending their best designs over for printing, as relaxing U.S. postal regulations encouraged postcard mailing.
[0.2 A]
This 1890s Leipzig-printed card allowed message room on the front.
[0.2 B]
Postal laws changed so cards could have message space on the back.
In 1898, picture postcards in the United States could first be mailed at half the letter rate, as long as there were no messages on the stamped side to interfere with the address. After lobbying by the postcard industry, regulators relented further by dividing the stamped side between space for the address on the right—beneath the postage stamp and cancellation—and dedicated space for a message on the left. Images on the front no longer had to leave room for messages, and could expand into the full space.
Individuals and itinerant photographers could produce their own cards as well. In 1903 Eastman Kodak came out with inexpensive cameras that used postcard-size black-and-white negatives. Printed onto photo paper stiff enough to meet mailing requirements, they could print one-of-a-kind postcards or make duplicates to sell commercially. Michigan-born photographer Montie Wasson produced large numbers of some of the finest military photo postcards made in San Antonio, in 1911, before he moved on to work in West Texas and New Mexico. Ralph Russell Doubleday, who produced highly regarded photo postcards of rodeos throughout the West, did some first-rate rodeo cards in San Antonio plus a notable series of the 1927 Battle of Flowers parade.
It seemed that everyone was jumping at the new opportunity to communicate, sometimes just to send notes to friends still difficult to reach by telephone across town. Many proudly mailed images of local landmarks to distant relatives, and travelers could visually boast of the sights they’d seen. In San Antonio, tens of thousands of homesick soldiers rotating through the city’s military bases formed a self-renewing market for postcard sales.
[0.3 A]
A butterfly carried images of four San Antonio landmarks in 1908.
[0.3 B]
Large-letter cards provided a favorite greeting format by the 1930s.
It’s difficult to imagine the extent of the postcard fad at the time. In 1908 more than 667 million picture postcards went through the U.S. mail. Many were from collectors mailing cards to each other. In 1909 a Philadelphia-based postcard club counted 10,000 members. Varieties proliferated for holiday greetings—even on St. Patrick’s Day and Halloween—and in every category imaginable, from sailing ships to dogs to high fashion. Some cards in this book reveal corners faded from having been tucked into high-acid paper albums manufactured to display postcards. A few show corner remnants of gummed album mounts.
The arc of picture postcards’ greatest popularity happened to coincide with the span of San Antonio’s reign as the largest city in Texas, ended by Houston in 1930. By then improved telephone service had made long-distance verbal communication easier, and better home cameras and film caused snapshots to replace one-of-a-kind photo cards. Quality lessened a bit as World War I cut off access to German printers. A surge of folded greeting cards mailed in envelopes reduced the holiday greeting market for postcards. By the 1950s, postcard production was mostly by mass printing, and the early-day sense of handcrafting was gone.
Yet so much visual variety had emerged and so many scenes are recognizable today that these early postcards afford a rich visual understanding of the beginnings of modern-day San Antonio, despite inevitable gaps in the postcard record. Many businesses, churches and schools chose not to produce their own postcards. In putting San Antonio’s best foot forward, postcard publishers overlooked the passé styles of grand Victorian homes in the King William district in favor of newer landmark homes to the north between downtown and Monte Vista. Older neighborhoods and expanding subdivisions received little attention in mass postcard offerings. Nor did African American neighborhoods get much notice, although a distinctive church “for Colored People” is the subject of one card in this book.
[0.4 A]
Comic postcards became yet another specialty category for collectors.
[0.4 B]
Woodmen of the World Camp 529 used a humorous meeting card.
An exception to the emphasis on prosperity is the volume of postcards mining tourist interest in impoverished residents who had fled unrest in Mexico to the south. Few other American cities at the time had such a sizable population of recent Mexican immigrants. They brought with them dress and foodways that postcard-mailing visitors from elsewhere found exotic, even if their primitive homes, or jacales, were sometimes ridiculed as “mansions.” Such fascination led some publishers to expand their selections by marketing images taken in Mexico as being in San Antonio, no matter that they included large buildings not in the city and backgrounds of mountains nowhere nearby. Such cards sold many copies, but did not make it into this book.
Postcard viewers need to be wary of captions as well. In the rush to get cards on sales racks, caption accuracy was a frequent casualty, and spelling is unreliable. Founding dates given for San Antonio’s Spanish missions are often before the missions existed. To spur sales, the same curious stone structure in San Pedro Park is identified on different cards as an “old arsenal powder house,” an “old cabin,” an “old Mexican fort,” an “old Mexican dwelling,” even as “Santa Anna’s Old Home.” All five descriptions are fabrications, as the small building’s use has not been determined.
[0.5 A]
Some San Antonians printed their names on a stock card.
[0.5 B]
This is the first in a four-card series with lines of the 1907 “San Antonio Song” chorus.
As a regional nonfiction book publisher for nearly twenty years, I sensed the value of vintage postcards as book illustrations, since their initial sales depended on good quality and popular appeal. Book publishers usually expect authors to pay sometimes-exorbitant fees to use images, including those on postcards, in institutional collections. That leaves many unused. Yet the more relevant images in a book, the better the book will sell, benefitting both author and publisher, and original vintage postcards, if they can be found, frequently cost less than some institutions’ single use fee.
Encouraged by my friend the late Bill Lende, whose extensive collection of exaggerated/tall tale postcards is now in the Newberry Library in Chicago, I purchased a large collection of San Antonio postcards. I began filling gaps through purchases online and from dealers, and held them for use by “my” authors at no charge. Their number in Maverick Publishing books ranges from eight in a book on place names to fourteen in one on railroads, forty-nine in a history of Fort Sam Houston and seventy-eight in my own book on the River Walk. Often cropped and enlarged, most are unrecognizable as illustrations from postcards.
[0.6 A]
An alluring photo was combined with a sales pitch.
[0.6 B]
The new Municipal Auditorium provided an up-to-date backdrop for advertisers.
Having sold my company to Trinity University Press in 2014 and no longer needing to hold images for first use by authors, I’ve selected more than 600 for this book. Uncropped, they present a distinctive visual portrait of a beguiling city in the era when San Antonio could promote itself as The Largest City in The Largest State.
[0.7 A, B, and C]
San Antonio photographer Ernst Raba (above) pioneered photo Christmas cards, a genre that includes greetings from the San Antonio Evening News sports staff (above right) in 1935. A San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway flatcar was the prop for a giant melon (right), the type of doctored images that exaggerated the size of a locality’s products and fabricated other tall-tale scenes as well. On the SA&AP flatcar, customers could also choose, says the ad on the reverse, giant corn, apples, pumpkins or potatoes.

Table of Contents

Contents Foreword ix Introduction xi 1. Arriving and Settling In Transportation 2 Hotels, Spas and Tourist Courts 6 2. Seeing the Sights The Alamo 24 Southern Missions 32 The Flavor of Mexico 42 Beyond San Antonio 50 3. Downtown and at Home Central City 56 Public Services 72 Neighborhoods 84 4. Out and About Dining 92 Entertainment 103 Fiesta 116 Clubs 124 Parks 130 5. Churches, Schools and Colleges Churches 140 Schools and Academies 150 Colleges 159 6. Military City USA Fort Sam Houston and the Mexican Border 166 Kelly Fields 194 Randolph Field 204 San Antonio Aviation Cadet Center/Lackland Air Force Base 207 Index 213
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews