National Museum of American Jewish History


Past Perfect: The Jewish Experience in Early 20th Century Postcards

Jewish publishers in the centers of Hebrew printing, primarily in Germany, Poland, the United States, Greece and Palestine, made special efforts to provide the Jewish public with appropriate versions of the popular general postcards. The subjects of Jewish postcards ranged from New Year's cards to those featuring specific Jewish themes. They were often accompanied by inscriptions in Hebrew or Yiddish.


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New Year's Greetings, Williamsburg Art Co. New York. Printed in Saxony, circa 1915. It reads in Yiddish, "On one scale a fortune, On the other, a groom, Say, oh lovely dear maiden, What would you enjoy?"

In a day and age when electronic mail, faxes and phone calls are routine parts of everyday life, the picture postcard is a charming vestige of the past. That past was revisited September 5 through January 9, 2000 in the Museum exhibition, Past Perfect: The Jewish Experience in Early 20th Century Postcards.

Organized by the Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary, PAST PERFECT showcased more than 150 postcards from the turn-of-the century. The exhibition focused on the most popular greetings, the New Year's card, which were produced and preserved in the greatest numbers. The sentiments conveyed on these "Rosh Ha-Shanah" cards run the gamut from the whimsical to the serious, from the secular to the religious, and were as varied as the communities that exchanged them.

The beginnings of the postcard were simple and modest. The early cards, in use from the 1860s, were created to answer the need to mail brief messages inexpensively, without the use of an envelope.

Zionist New Year's Greetings, Williamsburg Art Co., New York, Printed in Germany, circa 1915. It reads, "To the Land of Israel we chug along, Full of hope and faith, May the new year bring us all, A real victory." (Collection of The Library, The Jewish Theological Seminary of America)

The exhibition was augmented by postcards of Philadelphia synagogues and Rosh Hashanah pop-up cards from the collection of the NMAJH.

The first postcards were created in the 1860s. A private postal card was copyrighted on December 17, 1861 by John P. Charlton of Philadelphia. He was not successful, however, in obtaining a patent for his invention.

The printer of this pioneering card, Hyman L. Lipman, was a Philadelphia Jew. Lipman acquired the copyright and circulated these early cards until 1873 when the first official governmental postal card was issued in the United States.

An international postal treaty was signed on July 1, 1875 that officially allowed the mailing of postal cards internationally.

New Year's Greetings, Williamsburg Post Card Co., New York, Printed in Germany, circa 1915. It reads in Yiddish, "We come with good tidings, Good times lie ahead, Light and beauty, good fortune and good cheer, A world renewed."

In 1889, private publishers in Germany began issuing postcard with attractive pictures on the front side. The popularity of these picture postcards increased steadily, and countless picture postcards were produced and mailed throughout the world during the "Golden Age of the Postcard," lasting from 1898 until 1918.

European and American Jews participated fully in the "Postcard Craze." The colorful images that adorn these postcards afford a nostalgic view into a bygone world and provide the modern spectator with a rich and rare visualization of Jewish life at the turn-of-the-century.


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This exhibition closed at the museum on January 9, 2000, but will remain online.


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