Studying and Pontificating
Above is a photo in my "box of stuff" and on the back is written:
Feb 22, 1901
Room W, Gridley
Inmates - Wright and Kuck.
I'm not sure how to decipher what is written other than it likely has something to do with John Kuck. I have looked a bit and haven't found any Gridley that lived in Charles City, Iowa in 1901. Curiously though there is definitely a comma after the "W" and before the "Gridley" which makes me want to interpret as "Room W" and "Gridley".
But three things capture my attention that make me think I know exactly where this room is despite what it written on the back. If you embiggen the photo, look at the pictures on the top of the drop leaf secretary desk and you will see one that is quite familiar. I will post it below for you so so you can see it in more detail.
Mine didn't come in a large cardboard frame but this is definitely the picture and is of my 3rd great grandfather John Kuck on the left, his wife Elizabeth on the right and left to right in the middle his three children Clara, Paul and Bertha that he had with wife Elizabeth.
The oval picture directly in front of the one above looks like this picture below only cropped into an oval shape and put into a frame:
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| Clara Kuck in 1898 |
There are at least three more pictures upon that desk that would be sure nice if I could make them out but I can't.
The third thing that captured my attention was the windows on the back wall and left wall in the top photo. Notice how they are shuttered in two distinct sections from top to bottom? Take a look at the photo below of John Kuck's home on Ferguson Street.Knowing that it was a dorm room and not the inside of John's house, makes me wonder how much of that furniture was supplied by the college and how much by the "inmates" themselves? It looks pretty fancy for college dorm furniture, at least from my experience nearly 100 years after Clara. Someday, I've always thought I would build some sort of writing desk when the kids are both gone for good and I can turn one of their rooms into my writing room. I might come back to the picture at the top and see if I can recreate something similar.
After all that pontificating, I couldn't just leave you without actually showing a photo that I think it likely a room from John Kuck's house. On the back it says, "Taken July 29, 1900 By B. A. Kuck" Bertha didn't go to college and in July of 1900 was still living with her parents at their house on Ferguson Street in Charles City. AI did agree that it was likely an interior room of a Victorian style house of that era. I really wish it was more clear to tell what is above the upright piano. Family picture perhaps?

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You really notice things and examine them closely.
ReplyDeleteBlessed or cursed, I'm not sure which.
DeleteYou have a very thorough photographic record going so far back. I don't think I have any photos of the interiors of my great-grandparents' houses. (Not from when they were younger, anyway.) I was going to guess your photo was a room on W. Gridley Street -- obviously not knowing whether or not such a street exists -- but I would never have thought of a dorm room.
ReplyDeleteI think in everything I have been able to look through thus far, above is likely the only picture I have of the inside of John Kuck's house during the time he lived in it.
DeleteIt looks really fancy for a dorm room which I guess is what through me until A.I. came along and straightened me out.
That is a bunch of furniture for a dorm room! They must have been good sized rooms:)
ReplyDeleteThis were definitely different way back then when few made it to college.
DeleteThat's a very fancy dorm room! Mine was nothing like that. :)
ReplyDeleteMine either. Clara would have been appalled at my dorm room living conditions in college.
DeleteIt definitely doesn't look like a modern dorm room! Much more homey. Clara does have a sense of humor.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy her humor but it does make interpreting her pictures sometimes challenging.
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