I love it! I can spend hours looking at old photos (and maps!) of my own city, and also like to look for old pictures of cities I am going to visit on vacation.
I don’t know this person at all, and I’m not especially familiar with the area (Greater DC, I think) but a friend linked to this photo set recently and I thought it was great:
You bet I do. My town is lucky to have a healthy historical society with a great web presence. It helps my interest that I’ve lived here (off and on) 39 years, and my dad went to school here, as do I.
I do notice that pictures from the depression era (my particular interest) are almost nonexistent. Probably didn’t even take any - we were never a poor town, but we were thrifty to a fault.
I live in a city of 80,000 people. Old photos from around 1915 show people on horseback trotting through downtown. I’ve always wondered, “When was the last time someone rode a horse downtown to pick up, oh, a bag of nails?”
I enjoy looking at old pictures of the cities I live in. My mother collects old postcards of my hometown. When I was living in Minneapolis, I bought Twin Cities Then & Now by Larry Millett. It’s different, though, comparing a city you KNOW through 20 or 30 years of living there with its past and comparing a city you only lived in for two years or so with its past…it’s interesting, but not as fascinating. You don’t get that “Oh, wow! That’s where the Carmike theater is now!” kind of thing.
If you live in Chicago each library has a seperate “Chicago Collection.” And they are just full of books with old pictures of how streets, hospitals and stores used to look.
I especially like the shopping districts like Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago which was always a major shopping area.
I also love the old “downtown” books of Chicago before the huge skyscrapers like John Hancock were built and blocked so much out.
I did a website and part of it was getting old pictures of hospitals. I didn’t realize how many hospitals are on postcards. It seems kind of weird sending a postcard with a picture of a hospitals. I’ve never seen the actual postcards but I’ve seen picture. Evidently you aren’t nearly the only one to collect them because the prices are high
I picked up one book with then and now snaps from my branch a while ago, but I’ve already forgotten the name. But the best shot in it was one looking north on Wabash Ave. Major buildings on its west side were still in place.
I’m guessing the OP has seen all or most of the following.
And finally, the state of Illinois took aerial photos of the whole state in 1938-1941. You can see them at http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/nsdihome/webdocs/ilhap/. Images are in SID format. For viewing, free browser and Irfanview plugins are available.
I find the old photos fascinating. My city (Waltham, MA) is an old town-the Moodie Street area hasn’t changed a lot in 100+ years. Many of the old buildings till stand, and outside of the signs, the facades are the same.
What really strikes me: in the 1910-1950 times, peope were much better dressed than today. Men wore suits and tie; ladies wore hats. Even shopkeepers wore ties.
Today, people dress much less formally.
I love this kind of thing. In fact just yesterday I was looking at a book called “Over London”, which has the earliest aerial photos (mostly 1920s) they could find, with newly taken matching (perspective, angle, height, as close as possible) photos on the facing page. It’s so fascinating to see how the place has changed, especially because most of the older pictures were taken before the war. As you walk or drive around, once in a while you’ll see just one old house in among a nasty modern estate, then you can find a picture which shows that lone house was actually one of a street of houses all the same, but the rest were bombed. I love this town. I find it really interesting. I love old maps of it as well, from the earliest ones when London and Westminster were both pretty small and very definitely separate, then watching the rivers getting built over and the city expanding, assimilating villages as it went, etc. Old maps - and photos - are very cool.