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Detroit, Michigan, 1902. "Richmond & Backus Co. office." The other end of the room seen here, with a different cast of characters, and a cleaner desk. 8x10 inch dry plate glass negative, Detroit Publishing Company. View full size.
It prevents us from truly experiencing these exquisite snippets of the past. As a retired professional restorer, I've had the dubious pleasure of experiencing these sites, pre-renovation, and I can tell you that things smelled quite different than today. Modern fabrics, plastics and metal fade in a few weeks, but wood, leather, wool and horse-hair retain a distinctive smell for many decades, imparting an era-worthy aroma any 19th century citizen would recognize. I'm not so sure it's an improvement, olfactory-wise!
Actually, judging by the one my dad had, those chairs are amazingly comfortable. Wish I still had it, in fact.
It is interesting that there are components of the telephone that are not protected by a cover. What appears to be the telephone's induction coil can be seen very clearly, to the left, and level with the top of, the magneto box. Some of the instrument's wiring, and other components, can be seen beneath the coil, their beauty (for some of us!) exposed.
All good, substantial stuff, which, whilst there were rather fewer "applications" available for it, made for a telephone that was quite splendid, and not having a case manufactured from old pop bottles and coleslaw tubs. I would love a telephone like this.
Thanks again for so many utterly splendid and fascinating pictures, week on week.
David
England
Bigger cubicles perhaps, but I'll take my ergonomic and plush office chair over that heavy wooden behemoth any day!
Wonder what the desk visitor has in his little black book? Surely all business appointments.
Odd. I looked at the guy in the bowler and flashed on an old picture of my grandfather -- and my wife popped up with "that looks like you!"
Nah. Couldn't be him.
The concept of office cubicles is older than I thought. At least they were bigger back then.
It's a piece of furniture, not the Taj Mahal.
The original owners had no problem making changes to accommodate the newfangled technology.
A combination doorstop / tripper-upper (on the floor just to the left of the desk).
It appears that it had to mounted on or attached to the desk. Did that box with the crank usually get placed on a wall? I wonder if these phones were around when the term "crank call" was coined.
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