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 I’ve been turning this new postcard over in my hands all evening, letting it pull me into its world. There’s something magnetic about a streetcar gliding across a long wooden trestle, suspended between sky and water. The yellow car in my postcard feels almost alive, humming with the quiet confidence of an era when electric railways stitched together towns, lakeshores, and small communities. As I look at it, I can almost hear the soft clatter of wheels on timber and the faint buzz of the overhead wire.


Wooden trestle bridges like the one in my postcard were once common across North America, especially in the early 1900s. They were practical, relatively inexpensive to build, and perfect for interurban streetcar lines that needed to cross rivers, marshes, or wide inlets. One well‑documented example from that era is the Branford Trolley Museum trestle in East Haven, Connecticut, where a yellow streetcar—strikingly similar to the one in my postcard—crossed a wooden bridge over the river. The museum’s postcard shows the same kind of timber pilings and overhead electric lines that define the structure in my own card.

These trestles were feats of engineering, built from stacked timber bents driven deep into the riverbed. They were sturdy but had a certain fragility too—weather, tides, and time constantly worked against them. Many lasted only a few decades before being replaced by steel or concrete, or abandoned entirely when interurban railways declined mid‑century. That impermanence gives them a ghostly charm today, as if they were always meant to be temporary passages between worlds.

What I love most about this postcard is how it captures a fleeting moment: the streetcar halfway across, the water calm beneath it, the far shore hazy in the distance. It’s a scene that feels both ordinary and extraordinary. Ordinary, because this was once daily life—commuters, students, families riding across wooden bridges like this without a second thought. Extraordinary, because so few of these structures survive, and even fewer in such vivid, sun‑washed imagery.

The postcard becomes a tiny time machine. I imagine myself as a passenger, leaning slightly as the car sways over the planks, watching ripples shimmer below. Maybe the conductor calls out the next stop. Maybe someone opens a window to let in the breeze. It’s a small, human moment preserved in ink and paper.

Adding this postcard to my collection feels like adopting a fragment of lost infrastructure—a reminder of how people once moved, connected, and explored. These trestle bridges weren’t just engineering solutions; they were lifelines that shaped the rhythm of local life. Holding this card, I feel connected not only to the place it depicts but to the quiet optimism of the era that built it

 


A “ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME” HOUSE. Low, long, fascinating, with accent on windows. Count them! Both floor-to-ceiling and corner windows. All look out upon the beauty of flower gardens, flower boxes. Add to this the screened glazed garden porch with barbecue and storage closet. Living-dining-room with fireplace extends an unbroken 30 feet through the house. Larder closet for food storage adjoins kitchen and is handy to front and rear entrances. Interesting kitchen with table space. Split bath. Unusual feature: five closets in garage!


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

Gemini AI Rendering



The postcard slipped into my hands with that familiar, papery whisper that always makes my pulse quicken. Every collector has their moment of recognition—when an image doesn’t just depict a place, but opens a door. For me, this one did exactly that. The Seventh Avenue Pavilion in Asbury Park, New Jersey stared back at me in soft pastels, the kind only old postcards seem able to hold. The sky glowed in a dreamy wash of peach and blue, the boardwalk stretched like a promise, and the pavilion itself rose with a kind of quiet confidence, all arches and symmetry and seaside grace.

I found myself lingering on the building’s façade. Those tall arched windows, the classical columns, the way the structure seemed to anchor the shoreline—it felt like a snapshot of a time when coastal leisure was both elegant and communal. As I held the card, I imagined the hum of summer crowds, the shuffle of shoes on wooden planks, the salty breeze curling around the pavilion’s edges.


The Seventh Avenue Pavilion was one of several grand structures built during Asbury Park’s golden age in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Asbury Park had been founded in 1871 as a carefully planned seaside resort, and by the early 1900s it had blossomed into one of the East Coast’s most fashionable destinations. The pavilions—scattered along the boardwalk—served as social hubs where visitors could stroll, rest, listen to music, or simply watch the Atlantic roll in.

The Seventh Avenue Pavilion, in particular, embodied the architectural optimism of the era. Its design blended classical revival elements with the airy openness needed for a seaside promenade. Over the decades it witnessed everything: booming tourism, the rise of big-band entertainment, the slow decline of mid-century boardwalk culture, and the waves of revitalization that continue to shape Asbury Park today. Even as storms and time wore at the coastline, the pavilion remained a symbol of the city’s resilience and its enduring relationship with the sea.

Adding this postcard to my collection feels like adding a small, tangible piece of that history. I love how postcards freeze not just a place, but a mood—a cultural moment. This one captures Asbury Park at its most hopeful, when the boardwalk was a stage and the pavilions were its elegant backdrop. The colors are soft, almost romantic, but the structure itself stands firm, as if insisting on being remembered.

There’s something grounding about holding an object that once traveled through someone else’s hands, perhaps sent with a message like “Wish you were here” or “The weather is perfect.” Now it sits with me, decades later, carrying stories I’ll never fully know but can still feel.

 


DESIGNED FOR maximum use and maximum enjoyment. Story-and-a-half economy. Living room, dining room and special-use room open into one continuous sweep. Folding partition can close off special use room if desired. Spacious glass enclosed porch laughs at bad weather. Large sunny breakfast nook off square-shaped kitchen. New type split lavatory serves dual purpose as guest powder room and downstairs bath. Note seclusion of stairs to second floor. Gay modern touch given to exterior by trellised corner and corner windows underscored by flower boxes.



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

Gemini AI Rendering



The scene is alive with movement. The Shelburne rises proudly at the center, its tower crowned with an American flag that flutters against a sky brushed with soft clouds. The building’s architecture—grand, confident, unmistakably early 20th century—speaks of a time when Atlantic City was a booming resort town, a place where travelers arrived with steamer trunks and high expectations.

Below, the beach is a mosaic of tiny figures, each one a story in motion: families staking out their patch of sand, couples strolling the boardwalk, vendors weaving through the crowd. Even the vehicles scattered along the shore feel like characters in the scene, hinting at the era’s fascination with modernity and leisure.


What makes this postcard special is how effortlessly it captures the optimism of its time. The Shelburne wasn’t just a hotel—it was a symbol of Atlantic City’s ambition. Postcards like this were more than souvenirs; they were invitations, promising sunlit days, ocean breezes, and the thrill of being part of a fashionable destination.

The Shelburne began life in 1869 as a modest wood‑frame cottage, gradually expanding as Atlantic City transformed into a fashionable destination. By the early 20th century, it had already earned a reputation for excellent cuisine and high‑profile guests—most famously James Buchanan “Diamond Jim” Brady, who kept a lavish apartment overlooking the ocean and died there in 1917.

The postcard likely depicts the hotel after its major reinventions in the 1920s. In 1922, the original front section near the Boardwalk was replaced with a nine‑story structure, marking the beginning of its transformation into a modern resort.

The most iconic portion of the Shelburne—the tall central tower and the grand, brick‑faced structure recognizable in many vintage images—was completed in 1926. This expansion was designed by Warren & Wetmore, the New York architectural firm best known for Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan.

Their work on the Shelburne embraced Georgian Revival architecture, giving the hotel its stately symmetry, red‑brick façade, and elegant detailing. The style was a deliberate choice: it projected refinement and stability at a time when Atlantic City was booming as a health resort, drawing visitors seeking the restorative effects of sea air and sunbathing.

By the time the Shelburne reached its full 24‑story height—earning the nickname “The Skyscraper by the Sea”—it had become one of the city’s defining landmarks. With 400 rooms and suites, it stood as a symbol of the city’s ambition and its golden age of tourism.

Its later decades were turbulent, reflecting Atlantic City’s own cycles of decline and reinvention. The hotel was renovated in 1977 and eventually absorbed into the casino era, but its architectural legacy remains preserved in historical records and in the many postcards that captured its grandeur.

Holding it now, you can almost hear the distant hum of the boardwalk, the laughter carried by the wind, the soft crash of waves against the shore. It’s a reminder that travel once had a slower rhythm, shaped by postcards, handwritten notes, and the anticipation of arrival.

Every collector knows that some postcards simply feel different. This one has that quality. It blends architectural pride with human energy, nostalgia with movement. It’s not just a picture of a hotel—it’s a portrait of a moment in cultural history, preserved in ink and color.


 


STONE AND CLAPBOARD, with wrought iron supports and a bowed window wall, entrancing high style modern. Time-tested room arrangement. Separate living room with fireplace. Dining room off large hospitable entrance foyer. Kitchen with solarium type breakfast nook. Service vestibule and indoor service porch. Lavatory adjacent to kitchen. Three large bedrooms with built-in features. Extra large bath with double lavatory. Affluence, beauty, good taste.


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

Gemini AI Rendering



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