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(Source of the two pictures on this page: Florida Collection, Main Public Library)
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Do you want to bet that this Jacksonville store had a real musky smell? The crowded shop offered trunks, travel bags, and fancy leather goods. Adorning one trunk is a stuffed baby gator, and hanging from the walls are alligator hides, deer heads, and a fish. This postcard shows the retail outlet for the Florida Trunk Manufacturing Company, "headquarters for everything in fancy leather and alligator goods." The card dates from between 1901 to 1915, judging by its style. During this time period, the store moved to several locations, starting at 329 West Bay Street, then to 124 Main Street, and finally to 115 West Bay Street. In 1910, the proprietor was S. H. Etter.
BOXING IT UP -- Whenever you see an old attic in a movie or TV show, it usually contains travel trunks. They remind people of yesteryear almost as much as old picture postcards, Model T cars, and steam locomotives.
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Many trunks contained just a tray or two that fit snugly inside for holding items. A large wardrobe trunk, on the other hand, was something special, according to Jack McGiffen, who lived in Jacksonville during the early 1900s. (His memories are given in the wonderful book It Ain't Like It Was in the Good Old Days... No, and It Never Was.) A wardrobe trunk provided drawers on one side and a place to hang clothes on the other. If the trunk was turned upside down, an adjustable frame kept the garments in place. Under the space for hanging clothes was a box for shoes. All in all, a wardrobe trunk could serve as a well-organized, traveling closet. TRUNKS GO INTO RETIREMENT --
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