Two artifacts from the past today ‒ a pair of souvenir snapshots courtesy of a guest of Hotel Tudor, and a teaspoon.
The first photo depicts the interior of a room in the Hotel Tudor, which we can see is decorated in Early American style. The most notable of items is the telephone, the old-fashioned candlestick model. To the right is the bathroom, stocked with bathroom accessories.
The other photograph is taken on 42nd Street outside the hotel. The signs advertise the HOTEL TUDOR, the TAILORING LAUNDRY / SAME DAY SERVICE, and a HOSIERY concern. While the back of the photo is dated 1950, the view suggests it's from the mid-to-late '40s ‒ the street has yet to undergo widening and flattening for the arrival of the UN.
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The second artifact is a teaspoon, above. Despite its delicate design, it is very strongly made.
But we are more interested in the markings on the top, which prove to be Fred F. French's monogram, FFF. Read more about it here.
On the reverse side, TUDOR CITY.
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