March 10, 2009, 16:39
Steve Gossard"Official" Show us your Ephemera thread! Let's have fun!
Here is the backside.
March 12, 2009, 19:24
Larry BuchanView of Hamilton factory from 1939 Shareholders Report.
March 12, 2009, 19:30
Larry BuchanRARE OLD PICTURES FROM THE COMPANY ALBUM
1.) Personnel of the Balance Department on the company lawn one sunny noon in 1900.
2.) Picnic group of formen and job bosses snapped in one of Lancaster's sylvan dells in 1901.
3.) The Machine Shop as it looked in 1902.
4.) Another lunch hour in 1903 found this group "watching the birdie" outside the factory.
5.) It was a hot day in 1906 when this Finishing Department picnic was held.
6.) Work stopped at the Train room benches when this picture was taken in 1907.
7.) But some kept right on working in this picture of the Jeweling and Stripping Department taken in 1907.
8.) These 12 size Finishers seem to have finished for the day in this 1916 masterpiece.
From the 1943 50th anniversary Stockholders Report
March 21, 2009, 13:02
Bruce StewartHere is my latest little bit of Illinois memorabilia. It is reverse painted (printed?) on glass, and it is still in transport. Hopefully it will survive the trip

March 21, 2009, 13:03
Bruce StewartHere is the photo showing the date.
April 21, 2009, 00:24
Bruce StewartMy Illinois advertising piece arrived safely. The four spots where the gold paint had peeled over the years looked pretty bad, so I decided to fix the situation. After much mixing, and remixing, I finally managed to get a metallic gold that was pretty close to the original background. The four bad spots were touched up, then off to the frame shop it went. I just got it back a few days ago and it now resides in a prominent position on the wall over my workbench. I love looking at it everytime I enter the room.
April 21, 2009, 02:10
David AbbeThat is Awesome! Can you scan it so the rest of us can at least enjoy a print?
April 21, 2009, 12:18
Bruce StewartDave, Being that I don't have a scanner I think the best I could do is email you a higher resolution jpeg of what you see. Being over 22" long, it probably wouldn't fit on a scanner, plus I wouldn't want to take the chance of scratching that new $87 frame. This came from an architectural surplus house that sells signs, stained glass windows, etc. on eBay. They actually charged me $75. to ship it because of the packing required to protect the glass. Did you happen to notice the spelling of "authorized?" If you can't see it in my photo, they spelled it "authorised" — maybe that was correct back in 1925

April 21, 2009, 15:45
David AbbeThat 1921 picture was already a "nostalgia" item then. The Locomotive is in the 4 decades earlier Baldwin 4-8-0 family of heavy haulers c.a. 1885 popular in the Eastern U.S. Mountain runs.
April 21, 2009, 17:37
Bruce StewartDave, on the big light in front of the stack there is a CP logo. On the coal car there is a "C" then the number "22," then a "P." On the hump on top of the engine is the number "29." Do you think this indicates Canadian Pacific?