Showing posts with label Pesha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pesha. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 03, 2020
Picture Postcards by Louis Pesha
Louis Pesha was a photographer who was well known for his photographs of the Great Lakes area in the early twentieth century. The Pesha Postcard Company was located in Marine City, Michigan.
Pictured below is a Pesha postcard of Scott Park in downtown Sandusky. Scott Park was the original home of the Boy with the Boot statue, along with two maids of the mist statues.
The Erie County Courthouse can be seen in the postcard below, which features a fountain in Washington Park.
The steamer G.A. Boeckling is just one of the many Great Lakes vessels photographed by Louis Pesha. The G.A. Boeckling was christened on June 12, 1909, and transported guests to Cedar Point until 1951.
Tragically, on October 1, 1912 Mr. Pesha died in an automobile accident as he was traveling to visit his childhood home in Euphemia, Ontario.
Monday, April 09, 2018
Early Twentieth Century Postcard of Sandusky
This postcard was created by noted photographer Louis James Pesha in the early 1900s.
The eastern side of Columbus Avenue is pictured in Sandusky’s busy downtown
district. The Cooke building, with a
flagpole atop a decorative tower, can be seen at the northeast corner of Columbus
Avenue and Market Street. Stone’s Block, which housed the
general offices of the Lake Shore Electric Railway, is at the southeast corner
of Columbus Avenue and Market Street. At this time N.E. Marshall ran a
bookstore at 210 Columbus Avenue. The S.H. Knox and Co. 5 and 10 Cent Store was
in business at 214 and 216 Columbus Avenue. The Dietz and Mischler cigar store,
at 224 Columbus Avenue, was known for selling Siesta cigars for five cents
each. Puck, a cast zinc statue, stood in the front window of the store from the late 1800s until about 1915. Puck now can be
seen at the Follett House Museum.
The Bauman Brothers sold wallpaper at 226 Columbus
Avenue, and the Melville Brothers drugstore was located at 228 Columbus Avenue.
Also in the 200 block of Columbus Avenue was William Seitz Sons, merchant
tailor and the American Banking and Trust Company. O.S. Alcott ran a men’s
furnishing store at the northeast corner of Columbus Avenue and Washington Row.
You can read a portion of the sign of the O.S. Alcott store in the close up
view of the postcard below.
Thanks to Mr. Pesha, we can take a peek into our community’s past. Sadly, L.J. Pesha was killed in an automobile accident in 1912.
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