Some Vintage Valentines and a Story

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Hello.  Today’s post features a group of cards I bought as a lot from ebay a couple of weeks ago.

I’ve mentioned before that what I particularly search for in my vintage stationery collection are unsigned pieces — some collectors don’t mind cards having writing on them but my preference is for none.

So, when I came across this lot of old Valentine cards for sale on eBay, with very little in way of description, I sent the vendor an email asking if the cards had been previously used. In response I got a very brief note saying that some of them had writing on them and some didn’t, and that one of them had the year 1945 written on it.

I was going to leave it at that and move along without bidding on them. But, (and not to stereotype my cat-loving self), the kitten card had really gotten my attention. I considered writing again asking if there was writing on that specific one, but then thought this would probably be annoying, especially for such a small auction — the beginning bid was only $7.50. So I decided to bid for the 17 cards and if I won, I’d enjoy them as they were, with or without writing.

I could see that there were a couple of cards that are called ‘articulated valentines’. These are ones with moving parts, attached by a rivet. These are quite rare and I had none of them in my collection yet, so I was interested in those, too.

By these pictures you can see that I won them. I was surprised that nobody else had bid for them as I have seen single unused Valentines go for as much as $10 a piece.

When they arrived in the mail a week later I was excited to see which ones had writing and which didn’t.

What I discovered was really interesting. There were actually two separate groups here.

One set of 8 were all written on and they all had the same recipient on them. This was a pristine stack of Valentines that had been given in 1945 to a girl named Dorothy. The 2 articulated cards (directly below) were in this group, as was the kitten.

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writing

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↑ In case you can’t read the poem in the funny one above, it says ‘Blondes are nice. And brunettes too. But the one I like is really you.’ ↑

Some of the cards had the girl’s last name written on them, so out of curiosity I Googled her. The name was not a common one, so I found her pretty easily.

She and her whole family were listed in the 1930 United States Census. When she had received these she was a 12 year old girl living in a rural area in the state of Iowa. Her valentines had traveled 1292 kilometers (803 miles) and 68 years, to make it into my hands, here in Toronto in 2013.

Dorothy is now an 80 year old married woman living in California.

The census also reported the place that she had been registered so I searched it on GoogleMaps. I couldn’t tell what her exact address had been but I knew that she had quite a few siblings, so the family would have lived in a large house. I concluded it could have been this one, or one very much like it down the road.

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I thought about putting the details online and offering to give these Valentines back to the family, but aside from not wanting to invade the privacy of an elderly lady, further research indicated that it is highly likely that it was her family who relinquished the cards to be sold in the first place. The person who sold them lived a couple of miles up the road from Dorothy’s childhood home, in a small town there. I discovered that Dorothy’s brother, who had stayed in the family home all his life, had recently passed away, so I am guessing that these cards were found undisturbed where they’d been put back in 1945 by those who were clearing up the estate.

As for the remaining 8 valentines, they are all unsigned and in perfect condition and come from the 1960s by the look of the graphics. The person selling them must have grouped Dorothy’s older ones with these others and sold them all together.

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And the cherry on this vintage valentine tale is that there was a very special card included in this lot (if you can get more special than the Dorothy story?!). It is an Easter card in the same style as the 1945 valentines. I have never seen one. Vintage Easter cards are usually in the form of postcards or standard folded cards, so this is a very treasured find! I’ll wait until Easter to show it to you.

Update :  The Easter card is here.

Thanks for dropping over and happy Valentine’s Day to you. I am cooking a (hopefully) nice dinner for Nick, so better get moving!
xo loulou

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