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Great photo, thanks Blackthorn. The Seeger family was definitely very musically talented.
Good eye, KN, I forgot to include the location, and you are correct, it is DC.The photo looks, to my eye, to have been made on a Washington, DC street. The store sign visible on the far side of the street is a local retailer, still in business. According to the obituary of Madeline Rizik Curry, her father and uncle(s?) opened the store in 1908. It is now located on Connecticut Avenue.
One of these kids is Pete Seeger. His parents were traveling musicians, taking the family with them and living in their car (or in a tent beside the road). From 1921:
Who thinks today that everyone would just push on by without the kindness of waiting for a stranger to finish his photo before going about his business?
Ha! I just married into the family. You haven't met the wife yet!Quite the ferocious background, TJ... it puts your smile in context.
I am amused by the guy in the boater and the black guy behind him both standing aside and waiting for the photographer to be finished before moving on down the street. Who thinks today that everyone would just push on by without the kindness of waiting for a stranger to finish his photo before going about his business?
Washington, D.C., 1923. "Asst. P.M.G. Bartlett's car." Assistant Postmaster General John Bartlett survived; his car, also seen here, did not.
I don't know what's more amazing, the extent of the wreckage or the vintage hats. Just from looking at this old photo I can discern the quality of the dress hats being worn by the men in the crowd.