December 28, 2007

franz, march 1930


happy winter.


franz markus hoffer, (1909-1991) and friends.

December 21, 2007

art, 1943



today is the winter solstice so here is a wintry photograph of my cousin art jr. in york, pennsylvania in 1943.  his father, art sr., was my grandmother's much older brother, an allergist who was probably serving in the army when this picture was taken. he died from a stroke when art jr. was only 7.

December 13, 2007

rona, 1926


the heat in my apartment is broken and my feet are cold, so i went looking for a little bit of a summertime frame of mind to warm me up - in spirit only, since i doubt the power of photographs and memory when it comes to the physical warming of feet and hands.

my great grandmother rona went to hawaii in the late spring of 1926 with her maiden aunt rose. i don't know who was supposed to be acting as a companion for whom - if rona was invited so rose wouldn't have to travel alone - or if rose was asked if she minded acting as rona's chaperone. it doesn't really matter because no one ever complains about a trip to hawaii, unless there is a monsoon or a shark attack or an accident with a volcano.

so here is rona, 20 years old, standing under a palm tree on waikiki and posing for a picture with diamond head in the background. it doesn't really make me feel any warmer, but it does make me wish i were in hawaii - preferably in 1926 when it looked like this.

rona brown rose richman (1906-1992)

December 6, 2007

sam, ca 1895




my great-great grandfather sam came to the united states in 1895, leaving his wife minnie and four young daughters behind in russia. i am assuming he took this picture relatively soon after his arrival, maybe taking it on purpose to send it back to his family, though that is just hopeful speculation on my part. it would be a good story, but unless i become an expert on dating men's ties and collars overnight, there is very little chance that i can determine what the story behind this photograph - taken in a not-very-fancy photograph studio in a nice-looking suit - really is. his family joined him in 1899, and lived first in brooklyn, then manhattan (where son william was born in 1903), then the bronx. sam owned a series of stationary stores - the breed of store that sold toys and candy and cigarettes and newspapers and cards and other mundane sundries. this was never a particularly successful line of work for sam, and the family was very poor. according to my grandfather, sam's grandson, minnie was the hard worker in the family and sam was perhaps either (a) somewhat sickly or (b) a jewish scholar whose studies took time away from money-earning hours. i think the former option - sickliness - is perhaps the real reason, as sam died of stomach cancer in 1925, something that probably was the source of lingering illness. plus he hardly looks like a talmud scholar in this very american suit and tie and watch-chain. after sam died, his younger daughters and william (who made a fortune in the artificial flower business, a story that will wait until i can find a picture of him) financially supported their mother minnie, for of course there were no savings and no money in the store itself.

i always think of him, for some reason, as a relative who died young though in reality he was 70, which is perhaps on the younger side, but certainly not young. maybe i do this because by contrast he was young - his wife minnie lived into her 90s and died in 1956; minnie's mother died in 1924, in her mid-80s; and his daughter, my great-grandmother charlotte, lived to be 93. maybe it's also because he did not live long enough for my grandfather to actually know him very well, and therefore, he is a very vague personage about whom we don't have any stories. we have this picture, though, and a handful of records and maybe that is good enough for now.

sam hurdus (1855-1925)