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Carpets

Lockwood Bros. Co. – Furniture & Carpets – Paterson, NJ – Featured Fade – Jordan Jacobs, Guest Contributor

Mullins & Sons Furniture & Carpets – Sunset Park Industrial Park

© Frank H. Jump

Another Mullins vintage mural ad was seen from the elevated line off Broadway in Williamsburg and is featured on Kevin Walsh’s Forgotten-NY website- spotted during one of the first Forgotten Walks. [http://forgotten-ny.com/1999/01/on-broadway-brooklyns-broadway-el-has-a-fascinating-collection-of-old-advertising/]

Beshar’s Rugs & Antiques – Robert P. Beshar Obituary – NYTimes – Bronx, NY – J. O’Shaughnessy

© J. O'Shaughnessy

© J. O’Shaughnessy

Robert Peter Beshar, 86, died peacefully at home in Somers, New York on April 16, 2014…In 1993, Bob became President of his family’s rug and antiques business, Beshar’s, in New York City. Bob’s interests were varied and intense. A love of decorative arts — bronzes, china, jewelry, clocks. He liked to say: “the hand shapes the mind.” Reading novels late into the night — convinced there was more truth in fiction than in non-fiction. Telling a great story over dinner and challenging children, grandchildren and startled guests to “sing for their supper.”  – NYTimes Obituary

The Historic Shops & Restaurants of New York By Ellen Williams, Steve Radlauer

The Historic Shops & Restaurants of New York
By Ellen Williams, Steve Radlauer (The Little Bookroom, 2002)

Hemenway’s Furniture Carpets – Monroe, LA

© Frank H. Jump

Composite © Frank H. Jump

May, Stern & Co. – Furniture & Carpeting – Cash or Credit – Cincinnati, OH

© Frank H. Jump

In 1906 Spiegel’s mail order sales were nearly $1 million, far exceeding anyone’s expectations. To handle the overwhelming success of the mail order operation, a new company—Spiegel, May, Stern and Company—was formed, allowing the Spiegel House Furnishings Company to devote its limited resources to conventional retailing, rather than assume the debts associated with building up the mail order segment. – Wikipedia

cropped from larger ad below – Spiegel, May, Stern, & Co. Newspaper Advertisement in The Los Angeles Herald (May 10, 1908)

The Los Angeles Herald (May 10, 1908)

1958 Spiegel Catalog Cover, open source from the Spiegel Website and Facebook group. They give open license to use on-line. – Wikipedia

Ridgewood Carpet Co. – Carpets & Linoleums – Mr. Vacuum & Singer Sewing Machines – Ridgewood, QU

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

H.C.R. Elling – Carpets, Linoleums, Curtains, Rugs, Clothing – Utrecht, NL – Repaint

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

This repaint is one of many in the Netherlands that has been commissioned by local and city historical groups. For more info check out Gevelreclames (Gable Ads) @ www.gevelreclames.nl

Broadloom Carpets Revisited – Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn

© Vincenzo Aiosa

Featured Fade – Bryan or McKinley for President: F.W. Day for Dry Goods – Clothing – Carpets – Carson City, NV @NevadaWolf w/Interactions from @Fuzzygalore @aroundcarson @ghostsigns #rockads

CLICK FOR LINK TO PDF OF The Life of William McKinley (1901) – FREE EBOOK

 

 

 

 

The color picture [above] was taken by me, Teri L. The book the black and white photo came out of is called: Remember When: Celebrating the History of Carson City 1858-1950. The picture is located on page 101 and is credited to “Fred Willis Day Collection, Nevada State Museum”.

I first saw the ad when looking for a nearby geocache. The only part that was visible was the top half showing the candidates names and F W Day, but graffiti and the sun had obscured the rest. I didn’t think much of it because the black and yellow sign was still vibrant so it didn’t seem old. The significance didn’t click until I was looking through the Carson City historic photographs book and saw it in full and was able to make out the rest of the sign. Interesting that it says “Bryan or McKinley for President”.

The cliff wall it is on faces northwest and is tucked in a bend of the canyon (completely hidden from the modern road that passes nearby). The election was in 1896, which makes the vibrant colors very impressive if they are original.

A bit of history on Clear Creek Rd…

In the early 1860’s there were two main routes from Carson City to Spooner Summit, King’s Canyon Rd and Clear Creek Rd. In 1861 (1862?) Rufus Walton built a steep dirt path down Clear Creek Canyon, known as the Walton Toll Road. The Lake Bigler (Tahoe) Toll Road Company – owners of the Lake Tahoe Wagon Road – bought Walton’s route in 1863 to connect it to the more developed King’s Canyon route. Until 1875, most traffic went through King’s Canyon though some still favored the other road. In 1875 a flume was constructed to haul lumber from Glenbrook down to Carson City where it would be transported to the mines in Virginia City. The road in Clear Creek was improved and became the main route up and down the mountain. That is until the automobile arrived in 1913 when the King’s Canyon route was linked to the Lincoln Highway. However, that route remained only a graded dirt road and in 1927 the Nevada Highway Department paved and improved the Clear Creek route for use as the new US Highway 50. It remained the primary route, once again, until the modern highway was built in 1957, completely realigned and widened in anticipation of the 1960 Olympics in Squaw Valley.

Hope that helps somewhat to place the painting into its correct context. The two routes are so intertwined I had to research when each was used as I could only find reference to Clear Creek after 1928, which didn’t make sense if the election was in 1896. And most books and articles say King’s Canyon was the main route until 1875. There is a gap between 1875 and 1913 when the Lincoln Highway connected Carson City to Spooner Summit via King’s Canyon. I know the flume was constructed down Clear Creek and found that date to be 1875. Since that construction coincides with the decline of traffic on King’s Canyon, I can only presume that access was improved since lumber was the biggest business in the region due to the mines of the Comstock.  – Teri L, November 29, 2013

Nevada Milepost – Spring 2011 – Nevada’s Technology Transfer Quarterly Vol. 23 No. 1

Ad taken from ‘Dainties’ Union Cook Book – Bancroft Library – University of California

taken from Artemisia Yearbook 1904 – CLICK FOR LINK

William J. Bryan – McKinley’s Presidential Opponent – CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE © Wikipedia Commons

Future president William McKinley at age 15., c. 1858
– from The Life of William McKinley (1901) by Oscar King Davis,
p. 1 – Wikipedia Commons – CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Leon Czolgosz – McKinley’s Assassin – CLICK FOR LINK – Wikipedia Commons

H & T Newman / Anderson – Furniture & Hardware – Carpets & Matting – Eureka, CA

Underneath H & T Newman's name, it says Anderson. © Vincenzo Aiosa