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Adding this masterpiece to the collection is a true "full-circle" moment for any photography lover and dedicated collector of vintage Americana. This 1998 first edition of National Geographic: Photographs Then and Now isn't just a book; it’s a visual time capsule that perfectly captures the friction between tradition and progress. Printed in the USA, it represents the pinnacle of high-quality lithographic printing from a transformative era, serving as a vital piece of history for anyone who values the preservation of our collective past.
The imagery within serves as a profound study of contrast and evolution. From the iconic cover featuring a Maiko in Kyoto using a car phone—the ultimate symbol of centuries of tradition meeting a rapidly accelerating future—to the glowing, sprawling night skies of Chicago, the album highlights how our world has transformed. Seeing the 1956 perspective of the Statue of Liberty alongside the 1980s urban grit of New York City reminds us that photography is the only tool we have to truly "freeze" time and compare the "then" and "now" side-by-side.

 


RIGHT FACE! ABOUT FACE! This clever plan can be turned to exploit a beautiful site. (Note arrows for alternate fronts.) Living room, dining room, breakfast nook — all with window walls — face garden side. Covered living porch has barbecue fireplace adjoining massive indoor fireplace. Interesting kitchen, both shape and size. Large bath with vanity. Many closets. Perfect center hall layout. Privacy for all rooms. Sturdy, unadorned, well-proportioned exterior. Luxury ideas to satisfy the most demanding.


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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



 My collection just grew by one very special piece of history: a vintage postcard of Captain John Lake Young’s residence on the famous Million Dollar Pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey.


Imagine living in a house whose address was literally "No. 1, Atlantic Ocean". Built in 1906, this stunning mansion wasn't tucked away on a quiet street; it was situated directly on a massive entertainment pier stretching 1,700 feet into the sea.
Captain Young, a visionary showman and real-estate developer, built this private sanctuary in the middle of his bustling "Million Dollar Pier" amusement complex. While thousands of tourists swarmed the pier’s ballroom, theater, and aquarium just steps away, the Captain could retreat to his ornate home and manicured gardens—all while surrounded by the crashing waves of the Atlantic.
This postcard is a perfect example of the Gilded Age illustrations that captured the imagination of early 20th-century travelers. The artwork highlights the beauty of East Coast seaside Victorian architecture, characterized by:
  • Intricate Details: Note the ornate tower and the classical influence in the arches and balconies.
  • Lush Gardens at Sea: The illustration beautifully renders the Italianate gardens filled with sculptures that looked like chess pieces against the backdrop of the ocean.
  • The Romantic Atmosphere: With sailboats gliding in the background, the image evokes a sense of "magic" and the luxury of early Atlantic City.
Sadly, we can only see into this world through postcards like this one. Captain Young's magnificent mansion was demolished in 1953, and the pier itself suffered through several fires over the decades. Adding this card to my collection feels like preserving a small fragment of a bygone era—a time when a man could build a marble palace over the ocean and call it home.

 


IN SUMMER, a riot of gay flowers. In winter, a snug refuge. A happy background to life. Big enough to satisfy one’s needs. Small enough for minimum effort in upkeep. All the out-of-doors comes in through the corner windows adjoining the fireplace in living room. All the light and sunshine come in through the multiple windows in dining area. Corner windows in two bedrooms, extra large window in third. Rear service vestibule with direct passage to kitchen and basement.


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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



 There’s something special about holding a vintage postcard in your hands. The texture, the muted colors, the slightly romanticized illustration of a place that once stood at the center of social life—it’s like holding a small, paper window into another era. This latest addition to my collection is exactly that: another beauty.

The postcard features the grand old Windsor Hotel in Old Orchard Beach, a crown jewel of East Coast seaside resort architecture. Even in illustrated form, the building commands attention. Painted in a soft green with sweeping verandas, arched ground-floor colonnades, and a dramatic roofline crowned by towers and cupolas, it embodies the elegance and ambition of America’s Gilded Age.



Built in the late 19th century, the Windsor Hotel was designed to impress. During the height of America’s seaside resort boom, destinations like Old Orchard Beach became magnets for families, socialites, and travelers seeking fresh ocean air and refined leisure. Grand hotels were more than accommodations—they were statements. They symbolized prosperity, mobility, and the democratization of luxury travel made possible by expanding rail networks.

What makes this postcard particularly meaningful is not just the beauty of the building, but what we can see into it. The open verandas suggest evenings filled with conversation and sea breezes. The long arcades at ground level hint at shaded promenades where guests would stroll in their summer best. The many windows—row after row—feel almost like eyes, each one representing a story: a honeymoon, a political discussion, a business deal, a child seeing the Atlantic Ocean for the first time.

There’s also something deeply American about East Coast seaside Victorian architecture. Unlike the dense urban opulence of Gilded Age city hotels, these coastal structures balanced grandeur with airiness. Wide porches, balconies, and towers weren’t just decorative—they were designed to capture light, breeze, and views of the Atlantic. The architecture feels optimistic. It reaches upward and outward at the same time.

The artwork on these postcards plays its own role in shaping how we remember these places. Gilded Age illustrations often softened reality just enough to heighten the romance. Colors were richer, skies clearer, and buildings slightly more majestic than life. But that artistic enhancement doesn’t distort history—it enhances our emotional understanding of it. The postcard becomes both document and dream.

Collecting pieces like this isn’t just about architecture. It’s about preserving fragments of American identity—how we built, how we vacationed, how we displayed prosperity, and how we imagined beauty. The Windsor Hotel may belong to another time, but through this small printed image, it still stands tall.

Another beauty to the collection. And another quiet reminder that America’s coastal past was as elegant as it was ambitious.

 


SOMETHING NEW under the sun. Beauty and style in line — the long flowing line of the covered porch gaily underscored by a built-up flower box — the light movements of a bird suggested by the angle of the bedroom wing. Center hall house. Eliminates all cross traffic. Living room, dining room, kitchen and covered porch form an impressive and complete daytime social unit. Cheerful breakfast nook. Four bedrooms, two baths — one a split bath readily accessible from foyer. Other high lights: huge closets for coats, linen and brooms; folding door at end of foyer hall assures privacy for sleeping.


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source: 53 house plans for 1953 by Rudolph A. Matern

Gemini AI Rendering



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