This website seeks to encourage researchers and collectors to discover and study obscure ephemera that document American culture and life.  Worldcat reveals that most of the items that I post cannot be found in more than a few research libraries–often none at all.  Alternately, research libraries do not bother to catalog ephemeral publications like these.  I believe, however, that because these were distributed free, or at nominal cost, to consumers, they were the publications most likely to make their way into homes and be read by large numbers of Americans.

I acquire pre-1960 examples of the kinds of publications that prove so useful when scholars study 19th-Century America.  The limited competition that I encounter for them suggests that libraries, which could easily outbid me, have little interest in post-Civil War and 20th-century ephemeral publications in general.

I try to anticipate what materials future historians will find useful.  Being an historian first and a collector second, I organized this website to encourage others to do this too—even if this means new competition for me. I am aware that I could be wrong in prizing particular ephemera or even whole classes of ephemera.  I may even be wrong to encourage scholars to study obscure ephemeral publications; these may be obscure for good reason.

Ephemerastudies.org will permit me to share with others the information and imagery that I am acquiring, and to benefit from the knowledge, intelligence and experience of other scholars and collectors.  Please contact me with your impressions of the site.

~ Saul Zalesch

Previous Item
Title

YWCA Fomenting Communism 1948

Category
Booklet, gallery
Date

1948

Why It's Interesting

This booklet is a fascinating document of the extent of red-baiting in America in the years following World War II, even before the rise of Senator McCarthy.  The author Joseph P. Kamp portrayed the YWCA as a hotbed of Communist agitation.  He published a series of inflammatory booklets like this in the name of the Constitutional educational League, which had originally been established by Chief Justice and ex-President William Howard Taft but had long since become Kamp’s vehicle for fighting anything that even smacked of liberalism.  Other booklets in his series included Vote CIO and get a Soviet America, High Taxes . . .the Quick Way to Communism; and With Notions of Love, described as “the biographical booklet Walter Winchell wouldn’t want you to Read.”  [Winchell himself was a bit of a red-baiter; he almost destroyed the show I Love Lucy when he revealed that Lucille Ball had once voted the Communist ticket to please an aging grandfather.