This is a blog about music, photography, history, and culture.
These are photographs from my collection that tell a story about lost time and forgotten music.

Mike Brubaker
{ Click on the image to expand the photo }

Flying High in Iowa

26 April 2025

 
At first glance people might have
mistaken it for a giant box kite.
But this contraption could change direction
and move as easily into the wind as with it.






It also soared up and down 
almost like a bird
though it wings did not flap
and its engine was noisier than a flock of geese.







It was the new era of flying machines.
Some zipped across the sky like a hawk.
Others drifted along as sedately as a cloud.

Aeroplanes and airships
seemed to be everywhere now.
Not just in France, or Germany, or England,

but even in Iowa. 






A biplane flying above State Street in Blakesburg, Iowa did not seem to attract much attention from its townsfolk. You'd think people would wave or point. Maybe they were concerned about distracting the pilot as takeoff and landing an aeroplane on such a muddy unpaved road must have been pretty challenging. He appears to be sharply ascending perhaps to avoid the telephone and electric wires. 

Blakesburg is a town in Wapello County in southeast Iowa. In 1910 it had 344 citizens while its current population was 274 at the 2020 census. 



This dramatic picture of an aeroplane was published as a "Real Photo" by the Des Moines Post Card Co. of Des Moines, Iowa. In the 1910s the company's photographer documented quite an impressive number of flying machines over other parts of the state. 

By coincidence, just north of Blakesburg is the Airpower Museum, a 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m2) aviation museum founded in 1965 by Robert L. Taylor and the Antique Airplane Association. It has approximately 25 vintage aircraft on display and features a collection of aviation models, engines, propellers, photos and original art including some fighter planes from World War II.




In this next postcard another aeroplane very similar to the one over Blakesburg is making a dive over the entrance to the U. S. Fish Hatchery at Manchester, Iowa. You'd think this would startle the fish to jump out of the ponds. But unless that pilot pulls up quickly he will be startled too and  find himself hung in the trees around the hatchery.

Manchester is a city about 150 miles northeast of Blakesburg and 45 miles west of Dubuque, Iowa. In 1910 its population was 2,758 and 110 years later can boast of 5,065 residents. The Manchester Fish Hatchery is situated 4 miles southeast of Manchester and was first stocked with fish in the 1890s when it was operated by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In 1976 the hatchery was turned over to the State of Iowa as part of a land trade. Every year it produces 600,000 fish stock, primarily trout, that are then dispersed in Iowa waters.


The aeroplane is similar to the Wright brother's Wright Flyer Model A which was first flown at public demonstrations in Le Mans, France in August 1908. This was also the same model that the brothers contracted to build for the United States War Department in February 1908. The Wright brother's Model A design was licensed for production in Europe with the largest number produced in Germany. 

Evidently one enterprising fellow in Iowa found the means to buy one too. On 10 February 1913 he wrote a message on the back of this postcard to explain his new wings to his sister, Miss Olive Des Antels of Northville, Michigan. 



Sunday

Hello Sis,                                     
                  How are you all?
I'm fine.  This picture shows
me just coming back from   
town in my aeroplane.        
What do you know about   
       that?  No news out here.  Write
        me Sis.  Have subscribed for the
    Record.  So you won't have to
       trouble sending them any more.
            Love to all, Your loving Bro. Gene.
            Write soon.                          








Seventy miles northwest of Manchester is the town of Shell Rock, Iowa. It's much smaller than Manchester and in 1910 it had only 741 citizens. But amazingly the little town of Shell Rock could brag that flying over its sky were two aeroplanes and a sizeable airship too. Presumably the airfield was not on the main street. Those utility poles look very prickly. I wonder how they produced hydrogen for the airship.

It seems Shell Rock must have been the site for one of the first international airports as this postcard was addressed to a someone in Eibergen, Netherlands. It has a postmark of 6 October 1910, 4 PM from Shell Rock and a second postmark from Eibergen of 18 October. That's a very impressive delivery time considering that the maximum speed for Count Ferdinand Zeppelin's airships was around 48 km/h (30 mph). His dirigibles were designed to carry mail and passengers though I don't know how successful his competitors in Iowa were. Even the Wright Flyer could only manage 42 mph and still lacked sufficient power and fuel capacity for trans-Atlantic flight. I suppose the postcard more likely went by train. I believe there was once a railway bridge from Boston to Amsterdam.



Uit verre vorde
zend ik u ga me
er hartelghe goet
Shellrock Iowa
2 Oct 1910
            U** behende (?)
H. G.


From far away I
send you my
best wishes
Shellrock Iowa



During the 1910 decade of the first era of flying machines the people of Iowa were not going to be left behind. It seems nearly every town in the state had a visit from an airship or an airplane. I suppose it is part of that Iowan tradition of taking pride in what their state can produce.  Photo postcards of their gigantic Iowa corn cobs were very popular as well as pictures of 10 foot long Iowa carrots, rabbits the size of hippopotamus, and monstrous long pike fish (presumably well-fed on trout). I don't believe many people today know how important Iowa was to the development of airships and aeroplanes, but I have enough "Real Photos" to prove it. This is only the beginning of a series of stories I plan to tell about the early aviation craze in Iowa. So readers can expect to see more. No joke. It's all true, I'm sure.  





This is my contribution to Sepia Saturday
where combing the seashore can get pretty messy.




Smile for the Camera!

19 April 2025


 It's a shape that was once instantly recognizable.
Everyone knew what a camera looked like, even in silhouette. 
It was a large box with lens and shutter bulb, tripod legs, 
and came with a fabric cape to drape over the photographer.

Okay, maybe some dogs were a little confused.
That's a retriever thing.







A photographer was often like a theater director
commanding actors on a stage as they
prepared both the camera and the subjects. 
Everything had to be ready for just the right moment
when faces gleamed with a winning smile.







There were costumes to freshen up
and makeup to arrange.
The choice of camera placement 
might record a full figure or move in for a closeup.
Adjusting its angle for shadows and light 
accentuated features or disguised blemishes.
A good photographer considered themselves
more than just a craftsperson
but an artist too. 




Today I present a new genre of postcards
that I have started to collect,
art depicting early cameras and photographers.









Chez le photographe

                                            La mise au point est parfaite,
                                            Mais baissez un peu la tétem
                                            Ramenez sur vos bras nus
                                            Ce trop large pli de la manche,
                                            Prenez votre air du dimanche,
                                            Et, morbleu ! ne bougeons plus. 

At the photographer's

                                            The focus is perfect,
                                            But lower your head a little
                                            Bring back over your bare arms
                                            That overly wide fold of your sleeve,
                                            Put on your Sunday air,
                                            And, gadzooks! Let's not move.




This postcard shows a flamboyant photographer catching the attention of a little girl who poses for his camera. It was produced as number 3 in a series of humorous postcards by publisher A.D. of Nantes, Frances. The photographer looks professional enough but it looks like his camera is not pointed correctly. Nantes is a port city situated on the Loire River in the Upper Brittany region of western France. The postmarks have a date of 2 January 1908 and the card was sent to a young lady in Belgium.







* * *





My first image of a hooded photographer and a dog was cropped from a picture postcard showing a larger family group posing for a camera. It is a silhouette, a paper art form that was once a very popular kind of portraiture back in the time before photography. A talented artist used scissors to carefully cut a recognizable outline of a person from black paper. This image was made by a German artist Anna Schirmer (1852–1922) who was born in Stuttgart. This card was part of a series published by A. Ackermann's Kunstverlag of  München. The postmark is also  from Stuttgart with a postmark of 7 June 1910.







* * *




The third postcard is a colorful picture of a photographer preparing to take a photo of a young child in a home surrounded by a large family all dressed in rustic folk costumes. The girl looks directly at us as her mother arranges her head scarf.  The back of the postcard gives the title: 

Vesnický Fotograf ~ Village Photographer
from a collection entitled
"Obrazy z Chodska" ~ Pictures from Chodska.
 

The artist was Jaroslav Å pillar (11 October 1869 – 20 November 1917) a Czech artist who specialized in painting the Chodové ("Rangers"). This is a region in what was once western Bohemia, and now in the Czech Republic, where the Chods, an Eastern European ethnic group live. They speak the Chod dialect, a variation of Czech, and still maintain a strong sense of identity connected to the Bohemian Forest and their traditional role as defenders of the western Bohemian borderland.

This card was sent sometime after World War I as it has a Czechoslovakian postage stamp. The postmark is from Přeštice, a town in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic near the Chod people's homeland. The date is unclear but the 1920s is a fair estimate of date. The sender's message is in Czech, I believe.






* * *




I'll finish this short medley of cameras and photographers
with a picture of the photographer
who asked me to smile
more than a few hundred times.
He is my dad, Russ Brubaker,
seen here with his eye behind
a single lens reflex camera.
 




My dad had a lifelong passion for photography and
collected hundreds of vintage cameras of all kinds
and in different film formats.
He also produced countless prints
which he developed himself
in various dark rooms set up in our many homes.

My mom likely took this photo of him
with a modern digital camera and it is originally a color print.
But after scanning it to include in my bog post this week
I decided to use a software feature that transforms
a modern image into a vintage sepia tone style, 
in this case a platinum print from the early 20th century.

My earliest memories of my dad
are of him pointing a camera at me asking me to smile.
And I still do whenever I see one of his photos.  
Next week would have been his 96th birthday.


For other pictures of Russ behind a camera
check out my previous stories:
The Eye Behind the Camera and Everything In Focus









This is my contribution to Sepia Saturday
where you never know who might be behind the camera.

(Note: This woman is behind a windup cine camera
that makes a movie, not a still picture.)




The Clear-eyed Helicon

12 April 2025

 
To play a helicon,
the first wrap-around tuba,
a musician must make a serious commitment.
Such a large instrument requires
a good ear and a lot of breath control
since all its notes will be
the foundation of any band's music.







Likewise being a father,
and a husband, too, 
demands steadfast dedication
and conscientious practice. 
Raising a child requires a lot of patience
and at least one good eye
to keep a kid on the right path.

.

I think this no-nonsense fellow
knew something about personal discipline
as his photos are unusual examples
of a musician posed with the loves of his life,
his instrument and his family. 



These two small portraits came to my collection
united in their original tattered paper envelope
but separated from their family photo album
so I do not know their names, location, or date.
And unfortunately the photographer
left no mark either so I have to guess
that they are posed somewhere in America
in the late 1860s or 1870s.


The photos are tintypesalso called a ferrotype or melanotype,
which was a photographic process that used a thin sheet of metal
that was not actually made of tin but of iron (i.e. ferro).
It was coated with a 
collodion emulsion of silver halide  
that when exposed to light in a camera
produced a positive image
directly onto the metal plate. 

The resulting image is reversed
left to right like a mirror reflection.
This is evident in these two photos
because the valves of a helicon
are played with the right hand,
not the left as in the image.

Using digital software I can flip
the man's portrait to show his true likeness.




Now not only is his helicon in the correct position
but so is his right walleye too.
He appears to be in a photographer's studio
as his chair is in front of a painted interior backdrop
with a rumpled linoleum floor.
But it might have been taken outdoors
perhaps set up in the front yard of his home.


The man's family portrait with his wife and son
 was clearly taken outside as they are seated on a grassy lawn
and other neighboring houses are visible.  

Another useful clue for a tintype's orientation
is to see how buttons are arranged on a male garment.
A man's or boy's shirt or jacket almost always
has buttons inserted into holes on the left side
putting the seam edge on the right.




Here with the image reversed both father and son
now have their buttons done up correctly.
However mother's tight bodice buttons are also arranged
like her husband's with buttonholes on the left.
This is likely a dressmaker's convenience
that demonstrates how fashion
does not have hard and fast rules.



There's not much more to tell about this bandsman and his family
as what we see is only a brief moment in their lives.
It's likely that he earned a living at some other trade or business
as playing a tuba or helicon has never been a good way to make money.
His military style uniform is rather stylish
and suggests he was a member of a band
associated with a state militia.
But that was not like a regular army band
and would only be semi-professional work
performing for local parades and civic events.

Whatever his regular occupation
this helicon player seems to have done pretty well
to keep his son with nice shoes
and his wife in elegant dresses and hats.














This is my contribution to Sepia Saturday
where where the only rule
(a suggestion really)
is to leave only footprints behind.



Listen to the Bells

05 April 2025

 
It was a big day in our town.
Not too hot, a bit of breeze,
and dry enough for us townsfolk,
though ranchers and farmers might say otherwise.









It looked like everyone turned out
with ladies wearing their best hats
and men in their cleanest shirts.
No surprise that the stores on Main
did some brisk business
especially at the confectionary shop 
but it was probably too crowded for some. 
Mostly it was a time to catch up
with friends and family.










Our band played some lively tunes
that had the ladies singing along.
Then there was some speeches
and more songs too,
before everyone retired to the park
where the churches had laid out a big supper.
All in all it was a grand day for everyone.

You should have been there.

 








This postcard of a large throng of townspeople milling around on a wide dirt road came from Bells, Texas, a small town 70 miles north of Dallas. According to Wikipedia, it was established in "the 1870s when the railroad was extended to that point. According to local tradition, the ringing of church bells to greet the arrival of the railroad caused the name to be selected." In a 1914 gazette for the state of Texas, Bells was listed as having three churches, Baptist, Campbellite, and Methodist; a weekly newspaper, The Bells Chime; as well as a bank; restaurant; hotel; general store; drugstore; tailor; and two grocers. There was a photographer too, the Bows Brothers, who likely took this photo, perhaps out of a second floor window at their studio. Bells' population in 1910 was just 496 residents.

The 16 musicians in the brass band are typical for a small town. The bass drum even has the town's name stenciled on the drumhead though the other letters are unclear. I think they are members of a fraternal order, possible Woodmen Of the World as the word "Camp" and maybe "W.O.W." is visible. The W.O.W. was a group that in 1890 broke away from the larger Modern Woodmen of America and then split again into two versions of the W.O.W.

There is no caption or date for this occasion in Bells, Texas but with the long shadows it looks like a late summer day to me. Perhaps there was a county fair or maybe it was Flag Day (June 14th) though there are no patriotic bunting and flags around the storefronts. But it clearly shows a spirited event that attracted a very large number of people for such a small place. Unfortunately the buildings seen here have not been preserved in 2025 to identify this precise location. 




This postcard was sent from Bells, Texas
on 19 November 1907
to Miss Ruth Goree of Whitewright, Texas.



Bells Tex  Nov 18 –
Howdy –  I thought
I would send you  
a picture of our   
 town  Come up and
   I will show you all
the attractions –     
       Give my love to all
your folks –   George


The way George wrote the name of Ruth's hometown makes it look like Millwright but there is a second faint postmark below that reads Whitewright, a town located about 7 miles south of Bells. In 1910 it was a veritable city with 1,563 residents, three times the size of Bells. In 2020 the two towns are nearly the same size with 1,725 and 1,521 respectively.






But high above the crowd in Bells that day
was one fella who had work to do.
It was important to keep
the lines of communication open.
 



I wonder when George
first used a telephone.
Did he call Ruth's number?









This is my contribution to Sepia Saturday
where most folk are just standing around
waiting for something to happen.




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