F. Earl Christy
F. Earl Christy created the "College Girl" postcard design illustrated by the four postcards shown above. Born in Philadelphia on November 13, 1883, Christy attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts where he learned commercial artistry. Drawing on the influence of Charles Dana Gibson, the "College Girl" represented the upper class female student of the era. Each girl showed allegiance to her school, usually by wearing school colors and by waving a school pennant. National and international companies, including Christy's own father, William B. Christy of Philadelphia, published Christy's girls during the design's peak years in 1906 and 1907. Other artists created unsigned, "College Girl" styled postcards during this time.
The "College Girl" postcards had many publishers. One popular publisher, shown on these two postcards, was Raphael Tuck and Sons. Headquartered in England, with a satellite office in New York, the company branched into postcards in the early 1900s. Because the company was a publisher for the Royal Family, each card bore the phrase "Art Publishers to their majesties the King and Queen," along with the arms of the Crown of England. The company's logo, an easel and palette, was also on the cards. Most of the Tuck records and postcard originals were destroyed when London was bombed in WWII.
In 1861, John P. Charlton of Philadelphia received the first United States postcard copyright. Charlton later transferred the copyright to Philadelphian H.L. Lipman who sold the cards until 1873 when the U.S. Post Office took control over the postcard business. The 1898 Private Mailing Card Act allowed a person to send a one-cent non-governmental postcard, if the card was inscribed "Private Mailing Card." In December 1901, the Post Office allowed the term "Postcard" to replace the term "Private Mailing Card." Postcard users wrote correspondence on the front of the card until 1907, when the Post Office allowed correspondence on the card's backside. This change gave rise to divided line postcards that have a vertical line dividing the address and correspondence sections.
The postcard shown above, created between 1901 and 1906, bears the phrases "This side for the Address Only" and "Post Card," rather than the earlier phrase "Private Mailing Card." The postcard shown below, created in 1907, allowed the sender to write correspondence to the left of the divided line on the backside of the card.
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