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Exhibits
Current Exhibit:
BUY IT HERE:
LAUREL ADVERTISES
February 10-December 2008
The
Laurel Museum’s newest exhibit: Buy It Here: Laurel
Advertises explores how advertising illustrates one
American town’s story. It also explores American
advertising techniques and how they were used to sell
everything from housing to circus tickets in
Laurel.
Objects dating as far back as 1866 illustrate how
advertising methods were tailored to the needs of a small
town community. Through several story areas, visitors see
advertising objects that lined Laurel’s Main Street, came
through residents’ mailboxes, sat beside the columns of
newsprint in the local papers, or broadcast out to them on
their radios. (Click
to listen to a 1972 auto ad.)
Laurel Advertises
explores “Where We Lived,” “What We Ate,” and “How We Had
Fun,” These are illustrated by objects both familiar to
today’s shopper or evocative of times long gone. Visitors
will see familiar objects such as a metal pig from today’s
Laurel Meat Market, and a program from the 19th
Century Academy of Music that once graced 4th &
Washington Street. An 1896 Fairall and Ross Directory is a
precursor of today’s Yellow Pages. Live-broadcast radio ads
evoke by-gone cars and days at Laurel Race Track. A colorful
circus poster brings back memories of traveling circuses. In
the “Made in Laurel” area postcards, newspaper
advertisements, and colorful magazine ads promote objects
created in Laurel, but sold to businesses far and wide.
They’ll also see giveaways such as piggy banks, ceramic
mugs, dish sets, calendars and matchbooks that brought a
businesses into the homes, cars and pocketbooks of many a
Laurelite.
According to Museum Administrator Elsie Klumpner “Many of
these advertisements are our only record of the shops and
businesses that existed as Laurel evolved from a company
mill town to a 20th century commuter town. They
are a vital part of Laurel’s history – and its story.”
As in most American small towns, Laurel advertisers worked
hard to connect with the local community. They often
sponsored community events. Advertising techniques and
products changed over the years but the messages were
fundamentally the same: a desire to entice the consumer to
buy this hand made boot, try that beauty treatment, sample
this delicious food, enjoy a movie playing on Main Street,
and much more.
The focus and style of Laurel advertisements reflect
America’s and the advertiser’s customers’ evolving tastes
and desires and needs.
It is Laurel’s story, and the story of
an American institution – advertising.
Previous exhibits:
Stories from
the Attic: February 2006-December 2007
Wish You Were Here:
Postcards of Laurel
Over Here: Life in Laurel During WWII
George
Nye & His Diaries
Laurel School Room and
Samplers
A Laurel Founder's
Life ~ Horace Capron |