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National Brands: 1941
... Upper Peninsula." Acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Car ID 1937 Graham ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 03/20/2020 - 7:26pm -

August 1941. "Building in Ewen, Michigan, former lumber town on the Upper Peninsula." Acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Car ID1937 Graham Crusader.
Non-PC Car NamesGood eye, Hayslip. That's a very obscure auto to identify. "Crusader" would definitely not fly as an appropriate model name in today's world. Neither would the Studebaker "Dictator." In fact, "Dictator" probably became non-PC in the U.S. sometime around December 7, 1941.
[And who could forget the Fiat Fascist? - Dave]
Not the UtilityThe window is advertising Power House candy bars, made by Peter Paul (discontinued).
(The Gallery, John Vachon, Small Towns, Stores & Markets)

Waiting and Reading: 1940
... full size. 35mm nitrate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. Chicago Is that Marshall Field's across the ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 09/09/2011 - 12:14pm -

July 1940. Man waiting for a streetcar under the El in Chicago. View full size. 35mm nitrate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration.
ChicagoIs that Marshall Field's across the street?  Love the guy's shoes, they look like Stacy Adams.
(The Gallery, Chicago, John Vachon)

Entre Nous: 1937
... full size. 35mm nitrate negative by Ben Shahn for the Farm Security Administration. That's a cackle about That's a cackle ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 09/09/2011 - 11:44am -

1937. Just between you and me in Crossville, Tennessee. View full size. 35mm nitrate negative by Ben Shahn for the Farm Security Administration.
That's a cackle aboutThat's a cackle about something VERY naughty.  I can tell.
"Lawsy, would you look at that?""That Ida Mae Jenkins is driving in a new Ford, and her husband Edgar not even cold in the ground!"
"I declare, Pearlie Sue, some people just have no manners. No manners at all! You know she orders that high-priced rouge, too. All the way from New Orleans!"
(The Gallery, Ben Shahn, Cars, Trucks, Buses, Small Towns)

More Mystic: 1940
... last seen here . 35mm Kodachrome by Jack Delano for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Well, the Mobil station is ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 01/16/2019 - 10:38pm -

November 1940. "Street scene in Mystic, Connecticut." A view down East Main Street of the Christopher Morgan house, last seen here. 35mm Kodachrome by Jack Delano for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Well, the Mobil station is still thereThe streetview vision of this is just too depressing, as the whole look of the street has changed for the worse, though a number of the buildings are still there.
And the fine folks of Mobil Oil still have their gas station. The following for those of you who wish Mr. Delano had pointed his camera at the filling station:

FunnyThe old house at the end of the road looks like a Bed and Breakfast when viewed in color.  The same house looks haunted in black and white.
Trolley TracksIf you look at the centre of the street you can see evidence of the rails for the streetcars that once ran in Mystic. The condition of the tracks and the lack of overhead wire indicates the system was abandoned sometime previous to 1940.
(The Gallery, Kodachromes, Jack Delano)

Cleo Cola: 1941
... "Kandy." Acetate negative by Marion Post Wolcott for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Cleo-sed for business. ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 10/13/2019 - 3:01pm -

September 1941. "Buildings on main street of ghost town. Judith Basin County, Montana." Another look at the hamlet of Geyser, which seems to have an affinity for "Kandy." Acetate negative by Marion Post Wolcott for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Cleo-sed for business. Well, at least road is paved. 

All this and --Kandy too!
Barely thereYou can just barely see the "S" of "SUNDRIES" in the ghost sign on the side of that building today.
(The Gallery, M.P. Wolcott, Stores & Markets)

Hammond Girl: 1935
... full size. 35mm nitrate negative. Photo by Ben Shahn, Farm Security Administration. This little girl's brow This little girl's ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 12/10/2007 - 1:19am -

"Child of strawberry picker. Hammond, Louisiana." October 1935. View full size. 35mm nitrate negative. Photo by Ben Shahn, Farm Security Administration.
This little girl's browThis little girl's brow tells me that she is uncertain about things, and her fidgety  hands say she's had little time for real play.  
Touching photo.
(The Gallery, Ben Shahn, Kids)

Tractor Doctor: 1940
... Dakota." 35mm acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Railroad Depot As ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 10/01/2020 - 2:13pm -

October 1940. "Metal sign blowing in the wind. Doyon, North Dakota." 35mm acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Railroad DepotAs interesting as the sign and the old tractor are, what are my eyes drawn to? The depot, railroad tracks and the baggage wagon!
That wind is familiar to meI've never been to Doyon, but according to Google it is only a few hours' drive from my location. I am due north from it across the 49th Parallel, residing in my childhood home on the outskirts of a tiny hamlet in southern Manitoba, Canada.  I have seen, heard and felt that sign-torturing wind for almost eight decades! Cheers!
(The Gallery, Agriculture, Cars, Trucks, Buses, John Vachon, Rural America)

Gulf Hotel: 1939
... Composite of two photos by Marion Post Wolcott for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. A round of Gulf Thank you ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 04/26/2019 - 11:58am -

        The Gulf Hotel building (and lighthouse) at 1315 Fifth Street.
April 1939. "Even the gas stations in Miami Beach are on an elaborate scale, often modern design, resembling hotels." Composite of two photos by Marion Post Wolcott for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
A round of GulfThank you for all of the wonderful pictures of this hotel/ gas station.
Amazing that they would have to advertise for a restaurant to fill the harbor-front view.  I would have thought someone like Fred Harvey or Howard Johnson would have jumped on it.  Perhaps the space was too small.  
Where was Starbucks when you NEEDED them?
Location, location80 years later and they're still having problems leasing out that space.

(The Gallery, Florida, Gas Stations, M.P. Wolcott)

Ripe Two Mottoes: 1941
... Chicago." Medium format negative by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Somebody was a gardener As ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 10/30/2018 - 12:24pm -

April 1941. "Candy stand run by Negro, Southside Chicago." Medium format negative by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Somebody was a gardenerAs well as the flower boxes in front of the stand, and the painted box at the foot of the stairs, it looks like a terraced box goes all the way up parallel to the railing.
I'd like to see a picture from May when the blooms are out.
Subject and Predicate ChoiceA thing of beauty is no place like home.
Seems secure.This might be my favorite picture.  A small businessman making a living on the sidewalk. Do you think he leaves the candy in the shack when he closes up at night?  Or does he have a wagon to haul it all home?  I know he has the store chained to the light pole, so no one can just pick it up and take it away.
(The Gallery, Chicago, Russell Lee, Stores & Markets)

Just Add Water: 1936
... camp, California." Photo by Dorothea Lange for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Something is in there I'm ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 05/24/2018 - 11:56am -

November 1936. "Migratory family in automobile camp, California." Photo by Dorothea Lange for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Something is in thereI'm guessing that the man in the foreground has caught something in the tub and is wondering if it is something they can use for dinner because I doubt that a grown man would just sit and stare into an empty washtub.  If a squirrel, raccoon, rabbit, opossum or some other critter has become trapped in there, he could not get out on his own and may provide some protein for the family to go along with the fried dough many had to eat to sustain themselves in those dire days.  Desperate people would even eat rattlesnakes and still do today, even though they are well off.  What do you think it is? 
It's the LaundryJudging from the clothes on the hood of the car drying in the sun, I'd say it's the laundry.
[Hence the title. - Dave]
(The Gallery, Cars, Trucks, Buses, Dorothea Lange, Great Depression, Kids)

Near Newark: 1939
... Medium format negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Sigh If only any road in ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 11/29/2017 - 11:13pm -

April 1939. "Highway. New Jersey, near Newark." Medium format negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
SighIf only any road in New Jersey were so empty now. 
Programmatic architecture?That's the term I recall for roadside commercial buildings shaped like pigs, elephants, coffee pots, etc. That sort of thing peaked in the 20s and 30s. What is the roofline to the left of the Mobilgas signs, anyway? Not a gable, hip, mansard or gambrel, I'd say.
Also, it's interesting seeing photos of four-lane highways before they became common, and before some engineer hit on the idea of dashed lane lines to save on materials during the war.
Tar stripsI can feel them now bump-bump-bump.......
geezer
[Technically, those are control joints, sometimes called expansion joints. - tterrace]
(The Gallery, Arthur Rothstein, Cars, Trucks, Buses, On the Road)

Pie Town Still Life: 1940
... Lee, one of hundreds of photos he made of Pie Town for the Farm Security Administration. (The Gallery, Kodachromes, Pie Town, Rural ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 08/10/2012 - 4:14pm -

September 1940. Crops and vegetables at Catron County Fair at Pie Town, New Mexico. View full size. 4x5 Kodachrome transparency by Russell Lee, one of hundreds of photos he made of Pie Town for the Farm Security Administration.
(The Gallery, Kodachromes, Pie Town, Rural America, Russell Lee)

Name Your Poison: 1939
... protein. Medium format negative by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. And some more color ... ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 06/16/2018 - 3:23pm -

September 1939. "Detail of front of combined filling station and grocery store. Questa, New Mexico." Gasoline, caffeine, nicotine, protein. Medium format negative by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
And some more color ...applied and apart.
Big BenNot exactly the same but close.
An Early Trip To Marlboro CountryI was curious about the half-ad in the lower right. A quick search turned up the product name if not the actual ad. 
(The Gallery, Gas Stations, Russell Lee, Stores & Markets)

Gashouse House: 1938
... Medium format acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. "There's a ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 08/07/2020 - 10:54am -

November 1938. "Gashouse district. Omaha, Nebraska." Medium format acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
"There's a challenge."With the station wagon packed with all six of us plus luggage, open windows sucking in backroad dust, a summer sojourn wasn't complete until my father spotted a rural wreck, usually with sagging beams or a partial roof, and pronounced, with his best gallows humor, "Now there's a real challenge." He may have wanted badly to get us out of our suburban crackerbox, but even he had his limits ...
Big tank!I used to wonder about thos big tanks that moved up and down. Wondered if they would ever go boom like Beirut! They are all gone now, we use pipes.

GasometersIn L.A. gasometers were common, some very big ones in fact. Can you imagine in this day in age what would happen to one of those and the surrounding area if one was ignited by terrorists?  Glad they are gone.
(The Gallery, John Vachon, Omaha)

House Call: 1939
October 1939. Farm Security Administration camp unit at Merrill, Oregon. The camp nurse introduces doctor ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 12/08/2007 - 4:35pm -

October 1939. Farm Security Administration camp unit at Merrill, Oregon. The camp nurse introduces doctor to mother of sick baby. View full size.
(The Gallery, Dorothea Lange, Rural America)

The Ore Docks: 1941
... Medium format acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. High Level Air Brakes It is ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 03/11/2020 - 2:07am -

August 1941. "Ore docks at Allouez, Wisconsin." Medium format acetate negative by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
High Level Air BrakesIt is unusual to see Duluth Missabe & Iron Range ore cars, with their uniquely placed air brake connections above the couplers, being shoved onto the Great Northern docks.  The DM&IR had their own docks across the bay in Duluth.
BootstrappingIt's interesting to see all the iron that went into the dock, ships, railcars, rails and other equipment so that more iron could be produced.
Mostly still thereVachon is photographing from Great Northern Dock 1.  They all were originally timber but were rebuilt with concrete and steel.  The exception is Dock 3, rebuilt in timber, which we can see behind the foreground dock and is now gone.
(The Gallery, Boats & Bridges, John Vachon, Mining, Railroads)

Atlanta: 1939
... Medium format negative by Marion Post Wolcott for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Location The tower directly ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 04/11/2019 - 11:41am -

May 1939. "Slums in Negro district. Atlanta, Georgia." Medium format negative by Marion Post Wolcott for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
LocationThe tower directly in view is the Candler Building (built in 1906 by Coca-Cola magnate Asa Candler), while the one just to the right is the Rhodes-Haverty Building (completed in 1929; Atlanta's tallest until 1954). Both are still standing. 
The photo was taken from within what is now the Martin Luther King Jr National Historic Site. I suspect the location is Jackson Street just north of Auburn Avenue where the Ebeneezer Baptist Church and the King home are located.
Shorpy Vehicle Identification Imperative1936 Chevrolet Master 4 door sedan
(The Gallery, Atlanta, Kids, M.P. Wolcott)

Cheers (Colorized): 1937
... night in a saloon." Medium format negative by Russell Lee, Farm Security Administration. View full size. Where Everybody Knows Your ... 
 
Posted by Kenny - 12/13/2011 - 11:37am -

Colorized from Shorpy's files.  September 1937. Craigville, Minnesota. "Saturday night in a saloon." Medium format negative by Russell Lee, Farm Security Administration.  View full size.
Where Everybody Knows Your NameI remember fondly the black and white original on Shorpy. I recognized it instantly from one of my favorite shows. Now in color, it REALLY looks like the opening to Cheers. Thank you!
No AshtraysI guess they snuffed their cigarettes out on the floor?
(Colorized Photos)

The Travelers: 1943
... beet harvesters brought north from Mexico by the Farm Security Administration during World War 2. View full size. OWI photo. ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 06/12/2008 - 1:49am -

May 1943. Peso-brandishing beet harvesters brought north from Mexico by the Farm Security Administration during World War 2. View full size. OWI photo.
(The Gallery, Railroads, WW2)

Park Dance Eat: 1940
... Medium format acetate negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Ashes by Now Forest Park ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 02/20/2020 - 4:46pm -

February 1940. "Dance hall, Saturday night. Marshalltown, Iowa." Medium format acetate negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Ashes by NowForest Park ballroom at 1000 N 3rd Avenue in Marshalltown, was across the street from Riverview Park (site of the main public swimming pool). Rothstein snapped a couple of pictures there during his February 1940 meanderings in Iowa, from Davenport to Iowa City to Marshalltown to Grundy Center. After the ballroom burned, it was replaced in 1977 by a car dealership. 
Another Victim of FireThe Forest Park Ballroom burned down in 1977 and was replaced with a car dealership. 
See https://www.timesrepublican.com/news/todays-news/2017/03/ken-wise-dealer...
"Then in 1977, after the old Forest Park Ballroom burned down, Wise cleared the property, built a new facility and moved the business to its current location, 1000 N. 3rd Avenue."
(The Gallery, Arthur Rothstein, Cars, Trucks, Buses, Small Towns)

Alley Dwelling: 1935
... documented by the Federal Government's various New Deal (Farm Security Administration, etc.) photographic efforts. View full size. ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 03/02/2014 - 12:43pm -

1935. Washington, D.C. "Alley dwelling. The clutter of filth, debris and tin cans all have highly utilitarian purposes. [Whatever that means.] Many of the houses are without gas, water, or electric connections." A Harris & Ewing photo from the mid-1930s, using what by then was the anachronistic medium of the 4x5 glass negative, but with subject matter that was on the cutting edge of what was being documented by the Federal Government's various New Deal (Farm Security Administration, etc.) photographic efforts. View full size.
Value of debrisI think that means that the cans and other scrap metal were sold to scrap dealers, and rags might have been sold to make paper.
Utilitarian purposesWhat the caption probably means is that the inhabitants of this neighborhood have to be very resourceful with what little they have available, and can make use out of things most people would regard as trash.
(The Gallery, D.C., Harris + Ewing)

Sharecropper Boy: 1937
... Carolina." 4x5 nitrate negative by Dorothea Lange for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. I wonder what he found This ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 04/25/2015 - 6:11am -

June 1937. "Sharecropper boy near Chesnee, South Carolina." 4x5 nitrate negative by Dorothea Lange for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
I wonder what he foundThis hard-working kid may have discovered something in the dirt that has his attention.  My grandfather, who enlarged his garden just about every summer, always found objects like commemorative coins and medals, old buttons, gadgets, small medicine bottles, etc.  He would empty his pockets each time he came into the house to clean up and we kids would get to keep his "finds". It's all been relost over the years and hopefully refound by someone else, and could have been some wonderful keepsakes for all we know.  Metal detectors had not become widely available at the time.
(The Gallery, Agriculture, Dorothea Lange)

Modern Forest: 1941
... Medium format negative by Jack Delano for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Now that’s verticality! Not a word ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 11/04/2019 - 2:45pm -

January 1941. "Stacks at the Pittsburgh Crucible Steel Company in Midland, Pennsylvania." Medium format negative by Jack Delano for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Now that’s verticality!Not a word I get to use much, so need to jump at the chance. 
The family business Both of my grandfathers, a great-grandfather, and my dad (briefly) worked in that mill.  (Lots of uncles as well.)
Midland IntersectionAfter three months of this photograph haunting me, I've decide to comment in hopes that I can move on. I am not a teacher of photography (unless you count my 14-year-old), but if I were, this would be exhibit A for the lesson on composition. The intersection of every line, angle, and graphic element is so precise and considered, it must have been a labor of love for Jack to shuffle his cold feet and hands yards, then feet, then inches in each direction in the pursuit of excellence. There are other Delano images that are true favorites of mine (see Union Station: 1943 and The Home Team: 1941) yet this one certainly deserves a nod towards the art perfecting one’s craft.
(The Gallery, Factories, Jack Delano, Railroads)

The Last Roundup: 1939
... ranch near Marfa, Texas." Photo: Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Rip Torn Jr. That must have ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 03/25/2018 - 5:35pm -

May 1939. "Ranch owner's son resting after the roundup. Cattle ranch near Marfa, Texas." Photo: Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Rip Torn Jr.That must have been one heck of a roundup. His shirt is torn to tatters and, unless I am looking at it at the wrong angle, it seems he has torn the seat of his britches all to pieces. No wonder he needs a nap.
Innocent When You DreamI have so many questions, mostly about his torn clothing, but he is just a beauty.
3 wordsCue.  Tea.  Pie.
(The Gallery, Camping, Russell Lee)

Those Eyes, Those Lips: 1940
... Iowa." A tattered billboard shot by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. 35mm negative. View full size. Billboard A ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 05/29/2008 - 10:45am -

May 1940. "Advertising. Woodbine, Iowa." A tattered billboard shot by John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration. 35mm negative. View full size.
BillboardA harbinger of Pop Art.
Sweet...Mr. Vachon had quite an eye!
(The Gallery, Curiosities, John Vachon)

Allen-Bradley: 1940
... traffic signal in San Diego." Photo by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. The traffic light ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 02/16/2017 - 1:47pm -

December 1940. "Putting up a new traffic signal in San Diego." Photo by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
The traffic lightManufactured by General Electric between roughly 1937 and 1950, this is the Novalux sectionalized signal. The lenses are commonly referred to as "spiderweb" style and if you look closely you can see the GE logo embedded in the center of the lens. The pic below is one from my collection.
Interesting that they painted these in the field after installation instead of beforehand.
New Problems Don't Always Make Older BetterYeah LEDs don't get hot enough to melt snow, but with the amount of money saved in electricity and re-lamping (LED signals use about 1/10 the electricity of incandescents, and last about 10 times longer) they can afford a crew to go out and blow off the signals with compressed air or brush them off with a pole the very few times a year when it might matter.
[U.S. Patent 7211771 B1, "De-Icing System for Traffic Signals." -Dave]
Older Was BetterYou all may have noticed the proliferation of LED traffic signals in your area.  I can tell you that in Erie, PA, the new ones don't get hot enough to melt the snow that blows into them.  Same with LED marker signals and headlights on cars.  Newer ain't necessarily better.
(The Gallery, Cars, Trucks, Buses, Russell Lee)

Up Broadway: 1941
... Green." Acetate negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Broadway Is My Beat "from ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 08/25/2018 - 3:26am -

December 1941. New York. "Broadway from Bowling Green." Acetate negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Broadway Is My Beat"from Times Square to Columbus Circle—the gaudiest, the most violent, the lonesomest mile in the world."
I would've liked to have seen it with Danny Clover.
Nice Lineup!A couple of limos on the left. First is a Cadillac, second maybe a Cad, third definitely a Buick, fourth looks like a Lincoln KB.
On the right we have a 1941 Ford woody -- in the Navy;  a 1936 Ford, looks like a Tudor sedan; then a 1939 Chrysler Imperial; and a 1941 Oldsmobile.
V-8Looks like the V-8 hood ornament on the '36 Ford already has the tips of the Vee broken off. I've owned three of 'em and they all came that way. I wish cars still had, and deserved, the beautiful ornaments they once possessed. 
I sure like the Imperial. Yummy.
(The Gallery, Arthur Rothstein, Cars, Trucks, Buses, NYC)

Sharecropped: 1936
... Alabama." 35mm nitrate negative by Walker Evans for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. New shoes a'comin'... Fast ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 10/23/2014 - 5:06pm -

Summer 1936. "William Tengle, son of cotton sharecropper. Near Moundville, Hale County, Alabama." 35mm nitrate negative by Walker Evans for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
New shoes a'comin'...Fast forward about 6 to 8 years and he probably got new clothes and shoes courtesy of the US Army. Hope he made it back home ok.
(The Gallery, Kids, Walker Evans)

Back Seat Duet: 1938
... full size. Medium format negative by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. This natty duo can also be seen here . Cool ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 07/24/2012 - 7:08pm -

October 1938. "Negro musicians playing accordion and washboard in automobile. Near New Iberia, Louisiana." View full size. Medium format negative by Russell Lee for the Farm Security Administration. This natty duo can also be seen here.
Cool & HandsomeMy God the other man on the left side is handsome and dressed in a cool way. I just had to comment on it because there is always so much talk about pretty ladies. Ha, this picture proves that also some handsome men were captured on film back in the day!
Thanks for the great photos.
(The Gallery, Music, Russell Lee)

Hog Soup: 1936
... County, Maryland." Photo by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size. Huh? I've got to confess ... 
 
Posted by Dave - 12/04/2017 - 11:40am -

October 1936. "Cooking hog soup. Garrett County, Maryland." Photo by Arthur Rothstein for the Farm Security Administration. View full size.
Huh?I've got to confess that I'm wondering what kind of food made out of the pig would be better made in the middle of the field on a snowy day.  Maybe he's rendering lard?  Otherwise, I'd have thought that most good things would be better done in the kitchen that time of year!
Ewww!My guess is he might be using the entrails & making chitterlings (chitlins) soup/stew and believe me you don't want him cooking that stuff inside!
AKA Boar SoupGoogling you can find recipes for wild Boar soup. 
(The Gallery, Arthur Rothstein, Kitchens etc., Rural America)
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