Greater Nashua Flashback
(From The Telegraph files) It's been quite a few years since this group of men and women, all of them dressed up for the occasion, posed for a photograph in the studios of a photographer by the name of Yanulevicus, whose first name isn't included in his signature-stamp. It does include the address of his studio -- 16 Factory St. The biggest missing piece of the puzzle is who these men and women were, as nothing is written on the back of the photo. A guess is maybe they were the junior high, or high school, teachers, perhaps carrying on an end-of-year tradition of getting together for a group photo. As for the time frame, a guess puts it in the mid-1910s to the mid-1920s.
It’s been quite a few years since this group of men and women, all of them dressed up for the occasion, posed for a photograph in the studios of a photographer by the name of Yanulevicus, whose first name isn’t included in his signature-stamp. It does include the address of his studio – 16 Factory St. The biggest missing piece of the puzzle is who these men and women were, as nothing is written on the back of the photo. A guess is maybe they were the junior high, or high school, teachers, perhaps carrying on an end-of-year tradition of getting together for a group photo. As for the time frame, a guess puts it in the mid-1910s to the mid-1920s.
