Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Root Beer and Ice Cream: Culinary Trade Cards at the Library Company



How do you decide what food to buy? Despite all intentions, everyone’s shopping habits are influenced by the constant presence of advertising. From billboards to newspaper inserts, colorful images try to tell us that their product tastes better, is healthier, and is simply more fun. Yet as annoying as advertisements can be, they leave an unintentionally rich record of Americans’ eating habits.

In the 19th and early 20th centuries the trade card played a key role in the world of advertising. Vendors advertised their products with an astounding array of images and topics, some of which one might not necessarily associate with the product sold. This is especially apparent in culinary trade cards, where merchants used everything from flowers to medical claims to promote their goods.


Colburn’s Philadelphia Mustard
This die-cut card in the shape of a bulldog’s head is fairly imaginative. The design was likely used to appeal to children to have them convince their parents to purchase Colburn’s mustard, much like advertising does today. The product is advertised on the back as being the “King of Condiments” and “Always Reliable for Table & Medicinal Uses.”



Hires Root Beer
The entire premise of this trade card is based on the supposed medicinal benefits of Hires Root Beer. The back of the card is covered in testimonials from across the United States claiming that Hires Root Beer had improved the drinkers’ general health. Charles Hires, the proprietor, was a member of the temperance movement, which is reflected in the advertising for his root beer which proclaims it a “delicious sparkling and wholesome temperance drink.”



American Machine Co.’s Ice Cream Freezers
Culinary trade cards also included cooking implements. This trade card from the American Machine Co. shows a fantasized process of gathering the ice and cream to make the ice cream in the maker at home, the predecessor to DIY ice cream today.


Geo. Goetz, Bread, Cake, & Pie Baker


Bradley’s Meat Market
Can you tell from the images alone what these last two cards are selling? Trade cards did not necessarily show the product they sold. Some vendors, like the baker Geo. Goetz, used pre-printed designs that had a space for the printer to fill in the name of the company. Because of this, it is not unusual to find several cards that look exactly alike save for the merchant’s name! The other example here is an ad for Bradley’s Meat Market, which would be very difficult to guess from the image of a young girl holding a hoop!

Trade cards provide an amazing opportunity to gain insight into how people shopped and what they bought, information that might not otherwise be recorded in more formal documents. To see more cards, check out the Library Company’s online exhibit of 19th century pharmacist trade cards in the Helfand Collection at http://www.librarycompany.org/helfand/

The images in this post are all drawn from a recent gift from Milton and Joan Wohl.

Lydia Bello
Print and Photograph Department Intern Spring 2012


Monday, April 2, 2012

Visual Essay of the Before Madison Avenue Conference, March 15-16, 2012


Sketch by Concetta Barbera


The recent conference co-sponsored by VCP at LCP about the visual culture of early American advertising not only inspired thought-provoking discussions, it also inspired the library’s digitization technician and artist Concetta Barbera to sketch presenters from the Friday morning panel. This drawing together with her photographs of the event evoke the collegial tone of the one and one-half day conference which touched on lithographic advertisements, professional penmanship instructors’ techniques for self-promotion, and the marketing of Native American stereotypes, among other topics.  




Keynote speaker Peter Benes

Friday morning panelists

Panelist Nancy Austin





Erika Piola
Co-Director, VCP at LCP