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Customers and Communities : Serving the Cities : An Explosion of Mail

An Explosion of Mail







Display of five photographs built into a larger wall photograph of a city, cir. 1900







Listen to Audio Files >>

Many of the newest residents in American cities were recent immigrants. Letters were crucial to their lives, connecting immigrants first to their homelands, and later to children and grandchildren as these new American generations moved on to other parts of the nation. In 1889 alone, over 87 million letters and cards were exchanged between Europe and the United States, twenty-two times as much correspondence as flowed between the two continents in the years prior to the Civil War.

Letters joined these immigrants first to their lands of origin and later to their children and grandchildren as these generations, in turn, moved on to other parts of this country.

Visitors can turn these immigrant photos to hear and read excerpts of letters from some of the many new Americans who relied upon the mail as a lifeline to loved ones back home.

Listen to Audio Files
To hear an audio sample, Real Player is required.



Audio File: Jung to her father


Jung wrote from China in 1930 to her father in New York City, reassuring him that her brother Hu was behaving well and working diligently at his studies.



Audio File: Angelo di Angelantonio to his family


Angelo di Angelantonio, a native of Italy, found America the country of his dreams. Although he was illiterate, Angelantonio in the late 1880s dictated this letter to his family in a small farming community east of Rome.



Audio File: Walter Borkowski to his wife


Walter Borkowski wrote to his wife of his fear that she had forgotten him. His letter and those of other Polish immigrants in the United States during the 1890s were intercepted by Polish authorities and never delivered.



Audio File: Jacob Cohen to his family


Writing in Yiddish to his family in Poland, Jacob Cohen in November 1890 enclosed steamer tickets and instructions to join him in America. His letter was one of thousands confiscated by the Polish government in its attempt to stop Poles from leaving the country.



Audio File: Charley to his friend Charles


Charley, an immigrant from Belfast, Northern Ireland, wrote from the Bronx, New York, to his friend, Charles Connor, in 1907 of the high unemployment and low wages he had found in America.





Related Links:


Your Letters are Read with Eagerness exhibit


The Art of Cards and Letters gallery














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