After 150 years, and hundreds of thousands of vacation communications about pleasant or disgusting climate, lodging and meals, English Heritage fears the common-or-garden image postcard is in terminal decline: its analysis discovered that solely 8% of British adults ship a card every year, and a majority (52%) by no means ship them in any respect.
Matt Thompson, director of conservation and studying at English Heritage, says: “The postcard was as soon as as a lot part of the British vacation as a bucket and spade or the drip of ice cream; a handwritten be aware dashed off from the pier or a historic landmark, stamped and posted to family and friends again residence. However our analysis reveals a behavior fading quick and, if this decline continues, there’s an opportunity it might turn out to be a distant nostalgic reminiscence. There’s one thing genuinely unhappy concerning the thought of this custom disappearing.”
In an try to revive the customized, notably amongst kids, English Heritage has commissioned three limited-edition designs from kids’s illustrators Nick Sharratt and Quentin Blake, which could be collected free from 18 historic websites this summer time. They’ve been printed by Choose’s, England’s final family-run postcard enterprise. Graeme Wolford, whose household took over the 1902 agency in 1983, recalled that within the Sixties and 70s they had been promoting 12 million playing cards yearly.
Sharratt stated he hoped a toddler would need to maintain his playing cards—however much more that they’d be impressed to make a primary journey to a postbox: “in the event that they do then possibly postcards have a future in any case.” Blake insists: “There’s no higher solution to put a smile on somebody’s face than with a postcard.“
The survey discovered that adults are nostalgic about postcards: 86% grew up sending them, and 62% hoped their very own kids would proceed the custom. Postcards, low cost and cheerful and delivered a number of instances a day, had been an prompt success after they had been launched in Britain in 1870. Inside a yr, 75 million had been despatched, and that rose to 800 million by 1910.
English Heritage has not too long ago acquired an enormous cache of historic postcards of Dover Fort, greater than 800 collected over many years by Pat Cunningham, the previous head historian on the web site in Kent. A range is on show on the fortress’s examine centre, and guests are invited to assist transcribe them. Lots of the messages are distinctly boring, however some from the location’s days as a garrison are extra entertaining—or poignant. One reads, “If anybody involves Dover ask them to convey some potatoes”; one other says, “I used to be very dissatisfied that I didn’t see you earlier than I left on Friday, love and kisses from Daddy”.









