Helena native Tom Mulvaney has collected Montana postcards for decades. He has been a schoolteacher, coach, and sportswriter, and spent 17 years working as a programmer/analyst for the state legislature. From his private collection comes this choice sampling of images from Montana's Queen City. Renowned Helena artist and historian Robert F. (Bob) Morgan contributes an insightful and enthusiastic foreword to complement this amazing collection.
Title: Wish You Were Here
Author: Emily Donahoe
Publisher: Helena Independent Record
Date: 12/25/2008
Local collector illuminates Helena history with old postcards
It s a treat to hear stories about the good old days, but sometimes
it s a thrill to see them in person.
A new book of antique postcards by Tom Mulvaney offers a picture
window to Helena s vibrant history, from early Vigilante Parades to
famous and infamous local personalities, to the ever-changing
architecture of Last Chance Gulch.
A Helena native, Mulvaney is about the nicest guy you ll ever meet
who knows a heck of a lot about old postcards and Montana
history.
Originally into stamps and baseball cards as a kid, Mulvaney s
passion for postcards eventually became the one that carried him
into adulthood.
I think it s in some people s blood to be a collector, says
Mulvaney, who describes his entry into postcard collecting as a
melancholy story.
Mulvaney inherited the images that began his collection when his
grandparents, married more than 50 years, died within six months of
each other in 1975.
What intrigued Mulvaney about the postcards was the history behind
them, which often took some amateur detective work to uncover.
Of course this is long before the Internet, says Mulvaney, who
slowly found people who knew something about antique postcards by
placing classified ads in the newspaper.
For a collector, Mulvaney says the goal is to build up a base of
knowledge that way you know when you ve found something really
special.
Finding something unusual; that s always a treat, he says.
In the 30 years since he began, Mulvaney has collected about 30,000
Montana postcards from the turn of the century on.
Although photography had been around for awhile, Mulvaney says the
simple idea of picture postcards didn t take off until about 1910,
when the U.S. government announced that, unlike a letter, a
postcard could be mailed for just one cent.
These penny postcards became popular in a hurry, with both
companies and amateur photographers producing images on a heavy
backing to be sent around the world.
In an era where the written word was the main means of
communication, the cards were not only stylish but practical,
providing just enough space to tell of a birth, death or wedding
but not so much that the sender felt guilty about not writing
more.
Mulvaney says that the inscriptions he finds on the back of the
cards often add information to the imagery on the other side. One
postcard he s never quite figured out has the stamp of an official
court on the back, as though it had been used for evidence.
As far as unique images, Mulvaney says he has several postcards
depicting towns in Montana that no longer exist.
Those are especially intriguing to me, he says.
For his book, Mulvaney chose to focus on Helena postcards because,
he says, This is my town.
Although he was pretty well-versed in Helena history when he
embarked on the project, Mulvaney says he spent some serious time
walking around downtown, trying to figure out the exact locations
of some of the buildings he couldn t quite place.
Course some of them turned out to be parking lots, says Mulvaney,
who discovered that one beauty salon downtown actually used to be a
coal shop.
Complete with detailed captions, Mulvaney says the book is simply
meant to be a fun glimpse into Helena s heyday and what fun it
is.
Be forewarned a quick perusal of the collection can easily turn
into a much longer affair, punctuated by cries of Look at this!
For Mulvaney, some of the images evoke personal memories, such as
the ones of the old Marlowe Theatre.
That s a place I probably miss the most, says Mulvaney. It was just
one of those magestic old theaters.
Others don t inspire nostalgia but daydreams.
I think almost everyone who has ever seen a pictire of the
Broadwater Natatorium wishes they could have gone swimming there,
Mulvaney said.
Tom Mulvaney s Helena is available in local bookstores."
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