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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
Having unfolded your napkin, secure it to your belt with a pin.
A collection of old photographs, historic newspaper clippings and assorted excerpts highlighting the parallels of past and present. Featuring weird, funny and baffling headlines, articles and advertisements! Visit www.yesterdays-print.comĀ
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
Having unfolded your napkin, secure it to your belt with a pin.
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
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The New York Times, May 31, 1853
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Southern Standard, Columbus, Indiana, January 22, 1853
I’m not surprised these didn’t overtake traditional coffins, they look pretty creepy! The idea was that the bodies would stay in better condition because the coffins were “air tight”. That’s why they had windows - so you could view the face without having to open the casket. Some advertisements called them “embalming coffins”. They’d also make things a little more difficult for grave robbers. Similar coffins were also used if the person had died from a contagious disease. The coffins came with a door that would cover the face window, and the upraised bit over the chest was a name plate.
From Flickr:

And Archiving Wheeling:

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The Raleigh Register, North Carolina, May 14, 1853
“..hurry the poor negro from the genial clime he is accustomed to, to the icy regions of Queen Victoria’s Northern possessions..”
The Liberator, Boston, Massachusetts, March 7, 1856

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The Raleigh Register, North Carolina, May 14, 1853
“..hurry the poor negro from the genial clime he is accustomed to, to the icy regions of Queen Victoria’s Northern possessions..”
The Kentucky Tribune, Danville, Kentucky, October 13, 1854
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Green-Mountain Freeman,
Montpelier, Vermont, January 20, 1853
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The Spirit of the Age, Raleigh, North Carolina, April 13, 1853
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The Spirit of the Age, Raleigh, North Carolina, April 13, 1853
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The Young Lady’s Friend: A Manual of Practical Advice and Instruction to Young Females on Their Entering Upon the Duties of Life After Quitting School, London, 1853