Family & Social Life

Donations to the Museum have preserved irreplaceable evidence about generations of ordinary Americans. Objects from the Copp household of Stonington, Connecticut, include many items used by a single family from 1740 to 1850. Other donations have brought treasured family artifacts from jewelry to prom gowns. These gifts and many others are all part of the Museum's family and social life collections.

Children's books and Sunday school lessons, tea sets and family portraits also mark the connections between members of a family and between families and the larger society. Prints, advertisements, and artifacts offer nostalgic or idealized images of family life and society in times past. And the collections include a few modern conveniences that have had profound effects on American families and social life, such as televisions, video games, and personal computers.

Original artwork, of page 25, for the book Here Comes the Parade, written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919
Description (Brief)

Original artwork, of page 25, for the book Here Comes the Parade, written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.

Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919-1994) was one of the most prolific authors and illustrators of 20th century children’s books. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston until he was drafted into the army during World War II. After the war, Scarry worked as a freelance artist and contracted with Simon & Schuster to work on the Little Golden Book series. His first illustrations appeared in Two Little Miners, a 1949 story written by Margaret Wise Brown. Scarry’s most popular Little Golden Book was Best Word Book Ever, published in 1963. He published more than 500 children’s books, most depicting animals who took on human characteristics.

In Here Comes the Parade, depicting the beloved Macy's Thanksgiving parade in downtown New York City, Scarry's illustrations are sketched in pencil, colored with gouache and outlined with pen and ink. This annual celebration ushers in the busy Christmas holiday season and Scarry includes a vast array of participants, including a policeman, vendors, performers, bands, spectators and of course the giant balloons. The balloon figures include well-known book characters from The Wizard of Oz, as well as more recent popular TV figures such as Howdy Doody and Mickey Mouse and his friends.

The book’s subject represents one of the basic concepts supported by the progressive education movement, which encouraged literature celebrating the “here and now”—everyday life experiences—and aimed to tell stories about real events.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1951
maker
Scarry, Richard
ID Number
1992.0634.081.25
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.081.25
Here Comes the Parade was written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919-1994) was one of the most prolific auth
Description (Brief)

Here Comes the Parade was written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.

Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919-1994) was one of the most prolific authors and illustrators of 20th century children’s books. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston until he was drafted into the army during World War II. After the war, Scarry worked as a freelance artist and contracted with Simon & Schuster to work on the Little Golden Book series. His first illustrations appeared in Two Little Miners, a 1949 story written by Margaret Wise Brown. Scarry’s most popular Little Golden Book was Best Word Book Ever, published in 1963. He published more than 500 children’s books, most depicting animals who took on human characteristics.

In Here Comes the Parade, depicting the beloved Macy's Thanksgiving parade in downtown New York City, Scarry's illustrations are sketched in pencil, colored with gouache and outlined with pen and ink. This annual celebration ushers in the busy Christmas holiday season and Scarry includes a vast array of participants, including a policeman, vendors, performers, bands, spectators and of course the giant balloons. The balloon figures include well-known book characters from The Wizard of Oz, as well as more recent popular TV figures such as Howdy Doody and Mickey Mouse and his friends.

The book’s subject represents one of the basic concepts supported by the progressive education movement, which encouraged literature celebrating the “here and now”—everyday life experiences—and aimed to tell stories about real events.

Location
Currently not on view
date made
1951
ID Number
2013.0116.01
accession number
2013.0116
catalog number
2013.0116.01
Original artwork, of page 15, for the book Here Comes the Parade, written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919
Description (Brief)

Original artwork, of page 15, for the book Here Comes the Parade, written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.

Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919-1994) was one of the most prolific authors and illustrators of 20th century children’s books. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston until he was drafted into the army during World War II. After the war, Scarry worked as a freelance artist and contracted with Simon & Schuster to work on the Little Golden Book series. His first illustrations appeared in Two Little Miners, a 1949 story written by Margaret Wise Brown. Scarry’s most popular Little Golden Book was Best Word Book Ever, published in 1963. He published more than 500 children’s books, most depicting animals who took on human characteristics.

In Here Comes the Parade, depicting the beloved Macy's Thanksgiving parade in downtown New York City, Scarry's illustrations are sketched in pencil, colored with gouache and outlined with pen and ink. This annual celebration ushers in the busy Christmas holiday season and Scarry includes a vast array of participants, including a policeman, vendors, performers, bands, spectators and of course the giant balloons. The balloon figures include well-known book characters from The Wizard of Oz, as well as more recent popular TV figures such as Howdy Doody and Mickey Mouse and his friends.

The book’s subject represents one of the basic concepts supported by the progressive education movement, which encouraged literature celebrating the “here and now”—everyday life experiences—and aimed to tell stories about real events.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1951
maker
Scarry, Richard
ID Number
1992.0634.081.15
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.081.15
Original artwork, of page 5, for the book Howdy Doody's Circus, written by Edward Kean with illustrations by Liz Dauber and Don Gormely, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1950.During the 1940s and 1950s, Don Gormley created drawings for the popular Dell
Description (Brief)

Original artwork, of page 5, for the book Howdy Doody's Circus, written by Edward Kean with illustrations by Liz Dauber and Don Gormely, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1950.

During the 1940s and 1950s, Don Gormley created drawings for the popular Dell comic book series, Dell's Four Colors, that included Disney characters like Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse and Porky Pig as well as the popular cartoon character Oswald the Rabbit from 1942-1962. Additionally, he illustrated characters created by Walter Lantz, including Mr. McGoo and Andy Panda.

Liz Dauber's art career included working in several mediums, including illustrations, painting and magazine cover art. In her early years, she created colorful cover art for the popular New York women’s fashion magazine Mademoiselle. Married to Gregorio Prestopino, a painter of the Ashcan school, she and her husband were part of the planned community called Jersey Homesteads. Established by FDR during the Depression, this cooperative effort was meant to foster industrial, agricultural and artistic endeavors that served and enriched the community. Her illustrations for Howdy Doody's Circus was her sole effort for Little Golden Books, but she went on to illustrate several children and young adult books that featured topics about history, folklore and biographies. Her emphasis on juvenile literature also included books for the Scholastic Young Reader series and the Ginnie books.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1950
maker
Dauber, Liz
Gormley, Don
ID Number
1992.0634.076.05
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.076.05
Oscar Peterson. side 1: Where or When; side 2: Oscar's Blues (Mercury 8922), from the album, Oscar Peterson (Mercury C106).78 rpm.The cover art for this album was by David Stone Martin (born David Livingstone Martin, 1913-1992).
Description

Oscar Peterson. side 1: Where or When; side 2: Oscar's Blues (Mercury 8922), from the album, Oscar Peterson (Mercury C106).
78 rpm.

The cover art for this album was by David Stone Martin (born David Livingstone Martin, 1913-1992). Martin was an American artist best known for his illustrations on jazz album covers for labels including Mercury, Asch, Clef, Disc, and Dial. Many of his commissions were from Martin’s longtime friend, American jazz record producer and concert promoter Norman Granz (1918-2001).

Location
Currently not on view
release date
1950
recording artist
Peterson, Oscar
manufacturer
Mercury
ID Number
1981.0656.471
accession number
1981.0656
maker number
8922
C106
catalog number
1981.0656.471
Original cover artwork for the book Doctor Dan written by Helen Gaspard with illustrations by Corinne Malvern, and published by Simon and Schuster in New York, New York, in 1950.Raised in New Jersey, Corinne Malvern (1901-1956) was a child actress who, along with her sister, perf
Description (Brief)

Original cover artwork for the book Doctor Dan written by Helen Gaspard with illustrations by Corinne Malvern, and published by Simon and Schuster in New York, New York, in 1950.

Raised in New Jersey, Corinne Malvern (1901-1956) was a child actress who, along with her sister, performed in traveling plays, vaudeville and movies. After an accident in her teens, Malvern was forced to give up her acting career and later attended the Art Students League of New York. Proficient in watercolor, pastel, paint, pencil and ink she launched a career as a commercial artist and was known for her fashion illustrations and magazine covers. Shortly after, she teamed up with her sister, a children’s author, and began drawing children’s books, including seventeen for the Little Golden Book series, including Doctor Dan, Nurse Nancy, How Big?, Susie’s New Stove, and 5 Pennies to Spend.

Doctor Dan the Bandage Man and Nurse Nancy are examples of innovative display and marketing techniques. Simon and Schuster paired with Johnson and Johnson to promote the latter’s brand-name “Band-Aids” and targeted one of its likeliest consumers, children. Boys and girls would sport Band-Aids in colorful shapes of stars, hearts, circles and flowers from samples included in the pages of the book, all the while learning the basics of first aid.

Both books illustrate traditional attitudes toward gender roles in the 1940s and 1950s: The boy is “Doctor Dan,” while the female character is “Nurse Nancy.” These stereotypical images stand in stark contrast to the social upheaval that would emerge in the 1960s, challenging and altering perceptions of gender roles and civil rights.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1950
maker
Malvern, Corinne
ID Number
1992.0634.078
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.078
Original artwork, of page 23, for the book Howdy Doody's Circus, written by Edward Kean with illustrations by Liz Dauber and Don Gormely, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1950.During the 1940s and 1950s, Don Gormley created drawings for the popular Dell
Description (Brief)

Original artwork, of page 23, for the book Howdy Doody's Circus, written by Edward Kean with illustrations by Liz Dauber and Don Gormely, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1950.

During the 1940s and 1950s, Don Gormley created drawings for the popular Dell comic book series, Dell's Four Colors, that included Disney characters like Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse and Porky Pig as well as the popular cartoon character Oswald the Rabbit from 1942-1962. Additionally, he illustrated characters created by Walter Lantz, including Mr. McGoo and Andy Panda.

Liz Dauber's art career included working in several mediums, including illustrations, painting and magazine cover art. In her early years, she created colorful cover art for the popular New York women’s fashion magazine Mademoiselle. Married to Gregorio Prestopino, a painter of the Ashcan school, she and her husband were part of the planned community called Jersey Homesteads. Established by FDR during the Depression, this cooperative effort was meant to foster industrial, agricultural and artistic endeavors that served and enriched the community. Her illustrations for Howdy Doody's Circus was her sole effort for Little Golden Books, but she went on to illustrate several children and young adult books that featured topics about history, folklore and biographies. Her emphasis on juvenile literature also included books for the Scholastic Young Reader series and the Ginnie books.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1950
maker
Dauber, Liz
Gormley, Don
ID Number
1992.0634.076.23
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.076.23
Original artwork used for page 22 of the book, Doctor Squash the Doll Doctor, written by Margaret Wise Brown with illustrations by J.P.
Description (Brief)

Original artwork used for page 22 of the book, Doctor Squash the Doll Doctor, written by Margaret Wise Brown with illustrations by J.P. Miller and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1952.

John Parr Miller (1913-2004) was a native New Yorker who initially worked in the model department of Disney Studios from 1934-1942. He created characters for some of the earliest Disney productions, including Pinocchio, Fantasia and Dumbo. His interests expanded to include children’s illustrations, and his first assignment with Little Golden Books was the artwork for the Little Red Hen, one of the original fifteen books published in 1942. Working in a simple somewhat abstract style, Miller utilized bold, sharp lines and bright colors to make his images appear more graphic than painterly.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1952
maker
Miller, J.P.
ID Number
1992.0634.082.23
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.082.23
Pete Daily and his Chicagoans. side 1: Red Light Rag; side 2: Sugar Foot Strut (Decca 27037), from the album, Dixieland Jazz Battle, Vol. 1 (Decca A-770).78 rpm.Currently not on view
Description
Pete Daily and his Chicagoans. side 1: Red Light Rag; side 2: Sugar Foot Strut (Decca 27037), from the album, Dixieland Jazz Battle, Vol. 1 (Decca A-770).
78 rpm.
Location
Currently not on view
recording date
1950
recording artist
Pete Daily and his Chicagoans
manufacturer
Decca
ID Number
1978.0670.595
accession number
1978.0670
maker number
27037
A-770
catalog number
1978.0670.595
Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather was written by Dorothy Kunhardt with illustrations by J.P.
Description (Brief)

Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather was written by Dorothy Kunhardt with illustrations by J.P. Miller, and published by Simon and Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.

John Parr Miller (1913-2004) was a native New Yorker who initially worked in the model department of Disney Studios from 1934-1942. He created characters for some of the earliest Disney productions, including Pinocchio, Fantasia and Dumbo. His interests expanded to include children’s illustrations, and his first assignment with Little Golden Books was the artwork for the Little Red Hen, one of the original fifteen books published in 1942. Working in a simple somewhat abstract style, Miller utilized bold, sharp lines and bright colors to make his images appear more graphic than painterly.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1951
maker
Simon and Schuster
ID Number
1992.0634.027
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.027
Bobby Helms. side 1: Jingle Bell Rock; side 2: Captain Santa Claus (And His Reindeer Space Patrol) (Decca 30513)45 rpmCurrently not on view
Description (Brief)
Bobby Helms. side 1: Jingle Bell Rock; side 2: Captain Santa Claus (And His Reindeer Space Patrol) (Decca 30513)
45 rpm
Location
Currently not on view
date made
1957
recording artist
Helms, Bobby
maker
Decca
ID Number
1996.0320.03421
collector/donor number
1883
maker number
30513
catalog number
1996.0320.03421
accession number
1996.0320
Bill Darnel and Owen Bradley and his Ragland Band. side 1: You Can't Get to Heaven on Roller Skates; side 2: Cinncinati Dancing Pig (Coral 60288).78 rpm.Currently not on view
Description
Bill Darnel and Owen Bradley and his Ragland Band. side 1: You Can't Get to Heaven on Roller Skates; side 2: Cinncinati Dancing Pig (Coral 60288).
78 rpm.
Location
Currently not on view
recording date
1950
recording artist
Darnel, Bill
Owen Bradley and his Ragland Band
manufacturer
Coral
ID Number
1996.0320.14882
collector/donor number
18482
maker number
60288
accession number
1996.0320
catalog number
1996.0320.14882
This toy drill press was manufactured by the Danish company H. Langes Legetoy around the middle of the 20th century. The toy is made of cast metal painted red but is missing the ribbed steel band that runs from the lower pulley to the upper pulley to spin the drill. H.
Description (Brief)
This toy drill press was manufactured by the Danish company H. Langes Legetoy around the middle of the 20th century. The toy is made of cast metal painted red but is missing the ribbed steel band that runs from the lower pulley to the upper pulley to spin the drill. H. Langes Legetoy produced a variety of toy machine tools including a trip-hammer, grindstone, drill press, shaper, punch press, circular saw, tumbler, lathe, and grinder. These tools would often be arranged on a single board with a line shaft allowing all the machines to be operated simultaneously from a single power source.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1950
ID Number
MC.329076
catalog number
329076
accession number
278175
various artists. Dixieland Jubilee (Decca DL 7022).33-1/3 rpm.Currently not on view
Description (Brief)
various artists. Dixieland Jubilee (Decca DL 7022).
33-1/3 rpm.
Location
Currently not on view
recording date
1949
release date
1954
recording artist
Castle Jazz Band
Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band
Charlie Lavere's Chicago Loopers
Pete Daily's Chicagoans
manufacturer
Decca
ID Number
1978.0670.700
accession number
1978.0670
catalog number
1978.0670.700
maker number
DL 7022
Currently not on view
Location
Currently not on view
date designed
c.1940
date produced
1951
date made
c.1951
designer
Kogan, Belle
maker
Red Wing Potteries, Inc.
ID Number
1993.0234.01.A
catalog number
1993.0234.01.A
accession number
1993.0234
This Roy Rogers thermos was manufactured by Thermos in 1954. It features an image similar to the previous lunch box, object number 2001.3099.07.01.
Description (Brief)
This Roy Rogers thermos was manufactured by Thermos in 1954. It features an image similar to the previous lunch box, object number 2001.3099.07.01. Roy Rogers is posing with a kneeling Dale Evans, his horse Trigger, and his dog Bullet, under the sign for Roy Rogers and Dale Evans DOUBLE R BAR RANCH.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1954
depicted
Rogers, Roy
Evans, Dale
ID Number
2001.3099.07.02
nonaccession number
2001.3099
catalog number
2001.3099.07.02
Pee Wee Russell. Jazz at Storyville, Vol. 1 (Savoy MG-15014).33-1/3 rpm.The cover art for this album was made by Burt Goldblatt (1924-2006). Goldblatt was an American art director, graphic designer, photographer, and author.
Description

Pee Wee Russell. Jazz at Storyville, Vol. 1 (Savoy MG-15014).
33-1/3 rpm.

The cover art for this album was made by Burt Goldblatt (1924-2006). Goldblatt was an American art director, graphic designer, photographer, and author. In the early 1950s, Goldblatt created cover art for the new long-playing format albums, especially jazz recordings.

Location
Currently not on view
recording date
1952
recording artist
Braff, Ruby
Russell, Pee Wee
Resnick, Ephy
John, Kenny
Field, John
Richards, Red
manufacturer
Savoy
ID Number
1978.0670.716
maker number
MG-15014
accession number
1978.0670
catalog number
1978.0670.716
This silver metal case contained Richard Hudnut’s “permanent lipstick,” likely made around the 1920s. Metal lipstick cases began to replace paper wrapping in 1915, and William G.
Description
This silver metal case contained Richard Hudnut’s “permanent lipstick,” likely made around the 1920s. Metal lipstick cases began to replace paper wrapping in 1915, and William G. Kendall patented the sliding mechanism that extended the lipstick in 1917.
Richard Hudnut was one of the first American cosmetic manufacturers, selling his perfumes and cosmetics from his father’s New York pharmacy at a time when perfumeries from Paris were in vogue. In 1889 he organized R. Hudnuts Pharmacy, Inc., to continue selling his perfumes. His products became exceptionally popular, selling in department stores as well as pharmacies.
date made
1920-1950
maker
Richard Hudnut
ID Number
1990.0295.003
accession number
1990.0295
catalog number
1992.0295.3
Gene Autry. side 1: Merry Texas Christmas, You All!; side 2: The Night Before Christmas (In Texas, That Is) (Columbia MJV 150).78 rpm.Currently not on view
Description
Gene Autry. side 1: Merry Texas Christmas, You All!; side 2: The Night Before Christmas (In Texas, That Is) (Columbia MJV 150).
78 rpm.
Location
Currently not on view
recording date
1952
recording artist
Autry, Gene
manufacturer
Columbia
ID Number
1996.0320.11151
collector/donor number
2849
maker number
MJV 150
accession number
1996.0320
catalog number
1996.0320.11151
Original artwork used for page 15 of the book, Doctor Squash the Doll Doctor, written by Margaret Wise Brown with illustrations by J.P.
Description (Brief)

Original artwork used for page 15 of the book, Doctor Squash the Doll Doctor, written by Margaret Wise Brown with illustrations by J.P. Miller and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1952.

John Parr Miller (1913-2004) was a native New Yorker who initially worked in the model department of Disney Studios from 1934-1942. He created characters for some of the earliest Disney productions, including Pinocchio, Fantasia and Dumbo. His interests expanded to include children’s illustrations, and his first assignment with Little Golden Books was the artwork for the Little Red Hen, one of the original fifteen books published in 1942. Working in a simple somewhat abstract style, Miller utilized bold, sharp lines and bright colors to make his images appear more graphic than painterly.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1952
maker
Miller, J.P.
ID Number
1992.0634.082.16
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.082.16
Original artwork, of page 18, for the book Here Comes the Parade, written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919
Description (Brief)

Original artwork, of page 18, for the book Here Comes the Parade, written by Kathryn Jackson with illustrations by Richard Scarry, and published by Simon & Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.

Better known for his animal characters and the Busytown series, Richard Scarry (1919-1994) was one of the most prolific authors and illustrators of 20th century children’s books. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston until he was drafted into the army during World War II. After the war, Scarry worked as a freelance artist and contracted with Simon & Schuster to work on the Little Golden Book series. His first illustrations appeared in Two Little Miners, a 1949 story written by Margaret Wise Brown. Scarry’s most popular Little Golden Book was Best Word Book Ever, published in 1963. He published more than 500 children’s books, most depicting animals who took on human characteristics.

In Here Comes the Parade, depicting the beloved Macy's Thanksgiving parade in downtown New York City, Scarry's illustrations are sketched in pencil, colored with gouache and outlined with pen and ink. This annual celebration ushers in the busy Christmas holiday season and Scarry includes a vast array of participants, including a policeman, vendors, performers, bands, spectators and of course the giant balloons. The balloon figures include well-known book characters from The Wizard of Oz, as well as more recent popular TV figures such as Howdy Doody and Mickey Mouse and his friends.

The book’s subject represents one of the basic concepts supported by the progressive education movement, which encouraged literature celebrating the “here and now”—everyday life experiences—and aimed to tell stories about real events.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1951
maker
Scarry, Richard
ID Number
1992.0634.081.18
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.081.18
Original artwork, of the cover, for the book Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather, written by Dorothy Kunhardt with illustrations by J.P.
Description (Brief)

Original artwork, of the cover, for the book Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather, written by Dorothy Kunhardt with illustrations by J.P. Miller, and published by Simon and Schuster in New York, New York, in 1951.

John Parr Miller (1913-2004) was a native New Yorker who initially worked in the model department of Disney Studios from 1934-1942. He created characters for some of the earliest Disney productions, including Pinocchio, Fantasia and Dumbo. His interests expanded to include children’s illustrations, and his first assignment with Little Golden Books was the artwork for the Little Red Hen, one of the original fifteen books published in 1942. Working in a simple somewhat abstract style, Miller utilized bold, sharp lines and bright colors to make his images appear more graphic than painterly.

Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1951
maker
Miller, J.P.
ID Number
1992.0634.079.01
accession number
1992.0634
catalog number
1992.0634.079.01
This plastic and glass vacuum thermos bottle was manufactured by the American Thermos Products Company and served as a companion bottle to the Satellite Lunch Box, object number 2001.0387.06.01.
Description (Brief)
This plastic and glass vacuum thermos bottle was manufactured by the American Thermos Products Company and served as a companion bottle to the Satellite Lunch Box, object number 2001.0387.06.01. The bottle is adorned with action scenes in space featuring rockets and satellites hovering over the surface of the moon.
Location
Currently not on view
Date made
1958
maker
American Thermos Bottle Company
ID Number
2001.3087.06.02
nonaccession number
2001.3087
catalog number
2001.3087.06.02
Bind Blake and his Royal Victoria Calypsos. side 1: Peas and Rice - Little Nassau; side 2: Eighteen Hundred and Ninety-One (Art Records 1), from the album, Blind Blake (Art Records AL 4).78 rpm.Currently not on view
Description
Bind Blake and his Royal Victoria Calypsos. side 1: Peas and Rice - Little Nassau; side 2: Eighteen Hundred and Ninety-One (Art Records 1), from the album, Blind Blake (Art Records AL 4).
78 rpm.
Location
Currently not on view
release date
1952
recording artist
Blind Blake and his Royal Victoria Calypsos
manufacturer
Art Records
ID Number
1996.0320.05026
maker number
1
AL 4
catalog number
1996.0320.05026
accession number
1996.0320

Our collection database is a work in progress. We may update this record based on further research and review. Learn more about our approach to sharing our collection online.

If you would like to know how you can use content on this page, see the Smithsonian's Terms of Use. If you need to request an image for publication or other use, please visit Rights and Reproductions.