“Wild Animals” — “For School and Home Play” — was created in 1903 by Louis M. Schiel, Principal of the 23rd District School in Cincinnati, for The Cincinnati Game Company, and published by Parker Brothers. It came with a 16-page booklet, describing its many educational uses. (Posted by Doug Skinner)
Entries from January 2011
Children’s Card Games (124)
January 28th, 2011 · 1 Comment
Tags: Card Games · Ephemera · Liminal Graphics
An Ullage Dozen (37): Regular Cheese
January 28th, 2011 · 1 Comment
We found a toxin! Sound the tocsin! It’s always disturbing to see a pigeon pecking at fried chicken. a parrot mimicking a man mimicking a parrot coins shaped like puzzle pieces, so you can assemble them to make a dollar At the diner, a waiter asked a customer what kind of cheese he wanted on […]
Tags: Education
Children’s Card Games (123)
January 21st, 2011 · 2 Comments
“All Star Comics,” a 1934 creation from Whitman and the King Features Syndicate, featured characters from a number of comic strips: “Krazy Kat,” “Dumb Dora,” “The Katzenjammer Kids,” “Little Annie Rooney,” and “Just Kids.” This is Mush Stebbins, from “Just Kids.” (Posted by Doug Skinner)
Tags: Card Games · Ephemera · Liminal Graphics
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (14)
January 18th, 2011 · 2 Comments
Our Edwards fiesta draws to a close now. I’d like to leave with an intriguing note for the Forteans out there: in 1915, Theodore Dreiser threw a party for Edgar Lee Masters. Fort attended; and Bobby Edwards entertained on his ukulele. A photographer from the New York World was also there; I may have to […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (13)
January 17th, 2011 · 2 Comments
The Quill was one of the Village’s more successful little magazines. It debuted on June 30, 1917, owned and edited by Arthur Moss. Edwards was a regular contributor from the beginning; in 1921, he took it over, and ran it until 1926. There are a number of issues of The Quill archived on the internet. […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (12)
January 16th, 2011 · 1 Comment
Since Edwards in his Village heyday was described as a former illustrator, I’ve been curious about that earlier career. After a little rummaging, I think I found something. A “Robert Edwards” illustrated a book by Marion Hill, Harmony House, in Boston in 1910. Is it the same Edwards? I don’t know, but I think so: […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (11)
January 15th, 2011 · 1 Comment
Romany Marie (Marie Marchand), whose Gypsy-themed tavern was a popular hangout for decades, reminisced about Bobby Edwards in a long interview with Robert Schulman (for his book Romany Marie: The Queen of Greenwich Village, 2006). She quotes several Edwards songs, including this charming snippet: We are holy Christian martyrs We don’t shave or clean our […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (10)
January 14th, 2011 · 1 Comment
Edwards was featured a couple of times in Theatre Magazine in the ‘teens. We see him here in the August 1919 issue, rehearsing for “Greenwich Village Nights” — which soon changed its name to “Greenwich Village Follies,” thereby enraging Flo Ziegfeld. The August 1917 issue carried an article called “The Renaissance of Greenwich Village,” by […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (9)
January 13th, 2011 · 1 Comment
This postcard, by Jesse Tarbox Beals, was sold in the Village to fans of “The Village Troubadour.” I suppose that’s the “rustic shirting” Woollcott mentioned in the review I cited earlier. And it serves as a suitable illustration for another description of Edwards at work — although, in this excerpt, we find him not playing […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele
Bobby Edwards, the Troubadour of Greenwich Village (8)
January 12th, 2011 · 2 Comments
We had a look earlier at Bodenheim’s fictional portrayal of Edwards. There’s a more flattering assessment in this putative memoir from 1954, published soon after Bodenheim’s murder. Since the book was actually written by Samuel Roth and David George Kin, from Bodenheim’s unfinished notes, it’s hard to say who’s responsible for what follows. At any […]
Tags: Bobby Edwards · Ukulele