Item consists of a real photo postcard of the residential area on Main Street North, Brampton, above Chapel Street.
Item consists of a real photo postcard of the residential area on Main Street North, above Church Street.
Item consists of a real photo postcard of the residential area on Main Street North, above Church Street.
Item consists of a postcard of Main Street South, looking north from John Street.
Item consists of a colourized postcard of Jennings Nurseries, as viewed from a hill. The greenhouses were located at Church Street and Union Street.
Item consists of a colourized postcard of Wellington Street East, looking west from Chapel Street.
Item consists of a generic postcard with "In Brampton" printed on it, of a man kissing a woman in a parlour.
Item consists of a generic postcard of cattle and a red flag, on which Brampton's name has been added. The colourized photograph shows brown, spotted cows, which would suggest Guernsey, Ayrshire, or Red and White Holstein; it is likely, however, that they are actually simply unnecessarily colourized Holsteins.
Item consists of a postcard with a generic reproduction of a watercolour painting of a flower, to which the name "Brampton" has been added.
Item consists of a postcard parodying the accent of a European immigrant.
This generic postcard design is known to have been used in the United States as well. (Bryon L. Reppert, "Postcard History Series: Mechanicsburg", (Charleston SC: Arcadia Publishing), 2010, page 18.)
Item consists of a postcard of the Peel County Courthouse, built in 1867, likely a reprint of an earlier photograph.
Item consists of a postcard of houses on Main Street South, Brampton, including a car starting up one of the long driveways.
Item consists of a postcard of a photograph of the 1948 Etobicoke Creek flood in Brampton, inscribed on the side by the owner "Brampton 1948".