Trade Card for Dress Goods, Broadhead Worsted Mills, 1885-1895

01

Artifact Overview

In the last third of the nineteenth century, an unprecedented variety of consumer goods and services flooded the American market. Advertisers, armed with new methods of color printing, bombarded potential customers with trade cards. Americans enjoyed and often saved the vibrant little advertisements found in product packages or distributed by local merchants. Many survive as historical records of commercialism in the United States.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Trade card

Date Made

1885-1895

Subject Date

1885-1895

Creator Notes

Manufactured by Broadhead Worsted Mills, Jamestown, New York. Retailed by J.K. Boies & Company, Hudson, Michigan. Lithographed by Gies & Co., Buffalo, New York.

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

90.0.281.481

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Ink
Paper (Fiber product)

Technique

Lithography
Printing (Process)

Color

Multicolored

Dimensions

Height: 5.5 in
Width: 3.25 in