Playing Tennis in 1885

D. W. Granbery & Co., New York, NY.  Lawn Tennis Catalogue and Directions for Playing, 1885, page 8, Shepard's Patent Tennis Case, open view.

Summer might be over. There might not be many more warm days left. But how about looking through this D. W. Granbery & Co. catalog, Lawn Tennis Catalogue and Directions for Playing? The images of tennis equipment might make you think of warmer days …

Shepard's Patent Tennis Case looks like it was a great way for tennis players in 1885 to transport their tennis equipment. Advertised as, "one of the most useful and necessary articles ever manufactured for Tennis players," it was made of leather and large enough to hold a tennis outfit, tennis balls, and as many as four tennis rackets, but it was also lightweight. The case included a stationary racket press.  Shepard's Patent Tennis Case was priced at $9.

D. W. Granbery & Co. also sold other tennis equipment—rackets, balls, nets, poles, presses, and shoes. The company sold both low and high top tennis shoes.  A pair of alligator trimmed low tennis shoes cost $5 while all alligator low tennis shoes cost $6. High top tennis shoes were priced at $5.50.

As suggested by its title, the catalog includes directions for how to play tennis. The instructions are for two player games and three or four player games. A score card along with diagrams and dimensions of the tennis courts are also included.

Lawn Tennis Catalogue and Directions for Playing, an 1885 trade catalog by D. W. Granbery & Co., is located in the Trade Literature Collection at the National Museum of American History Library. Take a look at the Galaxy of Images to find more images from this catalog and others in the Trade Literature Collection.—Alexia MacClain

 

National Golf Month

Buist Seed Company Buist's Garden Guide and Almanac, 1896

Buist Seed Company, Buist's Garden Guide and Almanac, 1896.

August is National Golf Month.

The Libraries has a great quantity of seed catalogs in its trade literature collection, which tell us not only about products that were once, and in some instances, still are, sold in America, but also about fashion and daily life.

For some reason gay nineties grass seed sellers were anxious to appeal to the ladies of the golf course, as evidenced by this catalog from 1896 and one previously featured on this blog, from 1898. 

Go on girls . . . tee off!

Elizabeth Periale

LPGA – Ladies Professional Golf Association

Golf Digest Woman

Golf on Wikipedia

National Dog Appreciation Day—August 26

The Art of Stephen Huneck
Arty DogsFounded in 2004, by author Collen Paige, Dog Appreciation Day heralds the contributions made by dogs throughout society. Dog Home Magazine the official magazine of the Animal Miracle Foundation & Network (AMFN) has a twofold mission to honor dogs and to rescue dogs from shelters. AMFN encourages readers to donate $5.00 and hold local events in support of their local shelters while spotlighting individual dogs up for adoption.

From cave paintings to modern video artists have been inspired by dogs and illustrated their gratitude through all artistic medium. The Smithsonian American Art/National Portrait Gallery Library holds monographs on the subject of dogs in art. The following are some of the library’s holdings, with descriptions.

Arty Dogs, written by David Baird and illustrated by Maurice Broughton is essentially a series of ‘shaggy dog stories’, a tome to famous paintings with a dog as central to the narrative. From old masters to modern artists the author and illustrator make a hilarious read. John Singer Sargent’s painting of Madame X becomes the commissioned painting of the elaborately groomed black poodle owned by Madame X. The psychedelic prints of celebrities by Andy Warhol are reworked as initially inspired by the Cocker Spaniel pet of a visiting friend while ‘chilling out with the help of a pair 3-D glasses’.

Arty Dogs, text by David Baird, illustrated by Maurice Broughton, Stewart, Tabori & Chang, NY, 1999, N7668D6B351999

Published in 2004, The Art of Stephen Huneck, by Laura Beach interprets the work of recently deceased artist Stephen Huneck who shunned labels and worked mostly in wood to produce uplifting sculptures and furniture in a folk style. A severely dyslexic artist, Huneck was raised in Massachusetts and left home at age seventeen. Early in his life he worked as an antiques dealer and attended the Massachusetts Institute of Art. He eschewed the formality of traditional art and whittled large wooden pieces wryly commenting on modern culture. In 1997, he commenced work on this famous Dog Chapel modeled after nineteenth century New England churches. He completed the chapel in 2000, crowning the steeple with a winged black Labrador Retriever. The sign at the entrance to the chapel states ‘WELCOME ALL CREEDS ALL BREEDS NO DOGMAS ALLOWED’. Huneck also wrote and illustrated a series of books based on Sally his back Labrador. Early this year, he committed suicide outside his psychiatrist’s office a few days after laying off most of the staff in an economic downturn. He is survived by his wife who hopes to keep Dog Mountain and Dog Chapel open in his memory.

The Art of Stephen Huneck, Laura Beach, Harry N. Abrams, New York, 2004, N6537.H78B432004

Dog – A Dog’s Life in Art and Literature (image). Dog, by Iain Zaczek categorizes dogs throughout historical literature and illustration. Chapters trace such uses of dogs for various duties such as: sport, illustrated by works such as Pieter Bruegel’ s The Hunters in the Snow. Companionship is illustrated through the famous Victorian painting by Sir Edwin Landseer, The Old Shepherd’s Chief Mourner, c. 1837. In this often reproduced work a mournful dog stands watch by the coffin of his master. One of the illustrations for symbolism shows the Egyptian sculptured figure of a Jackal, 7th/8th Century BC. In ancient Egypt jackals represented gods who guided souls through the underworld.

Dog A Dog’s Life in Art and Literature, Iain Zaczek, Watson-Guptill Publications, NY, 2000, N7668.D6Z332000

Dog Painting 1840-1940 a Social History of the Dog in Art, by William Secord traces dog painting in pre-Victorian England through to dog painting in America. The work places emphasis on specific breeds, the history of dog shows, the establishment of kennel clubs, and specific dog artists. Most of the paintings illustrated serve as descriptors for particular breeds.

Dog Painting 1840-1940 A Social History of the Dog in Art, William Secord, Antique Collectors’ Club Ltd. Woodbridge, England, 1992, N7668D6S441992

The Dog in Art from Rococo to Post Modernism by Robert Rosenblum is a three chapter essay on dogs in Western art from the eighteenth century Rococo to the modern day. For his analysis of architecture the author illustrates, Clodion, Mausoleum for Ninette, at the Musee Historique Lorrain, Nancy, France. Claude Michel, a Rococo sculptor who signed his work Clodion, was active during the same period as Fragonard. His funerary monument elevated a dog’s remains to the equivalent of that of a human sarcophagus, replete with the deceased resting on a pillow, with two other dogs standing in support as columns on either side.

In contrast, the author notes a building of Post-Modern architect Stanley Tigerman, the Anti-Cruelty Society Building, Chicago 1981. Tigerman interprets the structure with a humorous bent as admission is gained through and entrance shaped as a dog’s head. The author states that Tigerman mixes the French eighteenth century architecture parlante, a theory espousing that function is illustrated by form, to that of American roadside traditions, such as, restaurants built in the shape of the food they serve, such as ice cream cones.

The Dog in Art from Rococo to Post Modernism, Robert Rosenblum, Harry N. Abrams, Ltd., New York, 1988, N7668D6R671988X

Doyle, New York, The 9th Annual Dogs in Art Auction Including Sporting Art (image), February 13, 2007 is one of the library’s holdings of auction catalogs. Doyle hold annual auction of paintings and sculpture by leading artists of that genre. Examples of works auctioned in this catalog were by paintings by Edmund Henry Osthaus, 1858-1928 and etchings by Marguerite Kirmse.

Doyle New York, The 9th Annual Dogs in Art Auction Including Sporting Art, Doyle New York, Auctioneers & Appraisers, February 13, 2007, N7668D6D682007

Alice Clarke

Happy Birthday Jackie Robinson!

Jackie Robinson swinging a bat in Dodgers uniform, 1954. Photo by Bob Sandberg. Published in LOOK, v. 19, no. 4, 1955 Feb. 22, p. 78.
Jackie Robinson swinging a bat in Dodgers uniform, 1954. Photo by Bob Sandberg. Published in LOOK, v. 19, no. 4, 1955 Feb. 22, p. 78.

Jackie Robinson, born January 31, 1919, and helped to end segregation in major league baseball when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. But Robinison was not only important historically—he was an All-Star baseball player, starting at first base, then taking over second for most of his career, all with The Brooklyn Dodgers. He also played himself in the Hollywood film, The Jackie Robinson Story. The Libraries has many books available to learn more about this fascinating baseball and civil-rights legend.—Elizabeth Periale


Jackie Robinson: a life remembered. Maury Allen. New York : Franklin Watts, 1987.

Jackie Robinson: race, sports, and the American dream. Edited by Joseph Dorinson and Joram Warmund. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, c1998.

Opening day: the story of Jackie Robinson's first season. Jonathan Eig. New York: Simon & Schuster, c2007.

Carrying Jackie's torch: the players who integrated baseball—and America. Steve Jacobson. Chicago : Lawrence Hill Books, c2007.

First class citizenship: the civil rights letters of Jackie Robinson. Edited by Michael G. Long. Robinson, Jackie, 1919-1972. New York: Times Books, c2007.

I never had it made: an autobiography. Jackie Robinson as told to Alfred Duckett; foreword by Cornel West; introduction by Hank Aaron. Hopewell, N.J.: Ecco Press, c1995.

Stealing home: an intimate family portrait by the daughter of Jackie Robinson. Sharon Robinson. New York, NY: HarperCollins, c1996.