Fellows Gear Shaper, Springfield, Vermont
Welsh National Museum c.1964
Lugano, Switzerland c.1952
Farm Scene
Under the Umbrella
Gripping the Potential Runaway
Friends
Less Than Thrilled
Perfectly Poised.
Ernest Illingworth Celebrates His Birthday Another…
13 Years Old and Bored
Bunch of Women
The Defiant Townsmen
Hattie
Old Dutch Cottage - Rayleigh, Essex
Two Turrets
The Glorious Grape Hat
Pensive And Dreamy
Litchfield Church, Connecticut
Winter, 1965
Hazel Lundbech, 1924 - 2023
Waving
The Tintype Mystery
Family Portrait in the Pasture
Plucking A Tree?
Baking on the Beach
Four Generations
At Brewster Park, New Haven, CT
Fixing It
A Little Bit of a Theme Stretch
The Partially Hidden Mother
The Dunkin' Donuts Evidence
Taken Unaware
Porch Step
Halloween, 1965.
Birthday Party Gang
Corkscrew Curls and a Precious Book
Off to a Gig, 1971
The Long and Winding Road
Enjoying the Mountain Top View, In A Joyless Sort…
The Eyes Have It.
Grandma Porter in Front of Her House
Off to Bed, 1958
Angry Ronnie
Our New House, c.1958
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Seminole Point Lodge, Sunapee, New Hampshire
Uploaded for the Vintage Photos Theme Park theme of: MOTEL, HOTEL, TENT, OR ANY SORT OF BUILDING OR STRUCTURE USED FOR OVERNIGHT ACCOMMODATIONS WHILE TRAVELING.
My husband's grandfather co-owned a house on Lake Sunapee, N.H. with two family friends in the 1940s - 1960s, so they would not have stayed here (as it was close by) - but they did own this postcard!
This is an interior shot of the motel - and typical of a lobby in the 1950s/60s, although the piano and stonework are a little fancier than many motels.
The back of the card reads:
The focal point of our guests is the spacious lounge - with it's true New England warmth and welcome.
[Shouldn't that be "for" our guests?]
Photo by Woodie Style
My husband's grandfather co-owned a house on Lake Sunapee, N.H. with two family friends in the 1940s - 1960s, so they would not have stayed here (as it was close by) - but they did own this postcard!
This is an interior shot of the motel - and typical of a lobby in the 1950s/60s, although the piano and stonework are a little fancier than many motels.
The back of the card reads:
The focal point of our guests is the spacious lounge - with it's true New England warmth and welcome.
[Shouldn't that be "for" our guests?]
Photo by Woodie Style
Smiley Derleth, Alan Mays, Aschi "Freestone", homaris have particularly liked this photo
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