We especially love the note on the left regarding the creation of a band of talented passengers to perform a small concert. Any passengers bring along a violin and perhaps a bass? Nopedidn't think so.
[Photos: Jaunted]
We'll fully admit that we save our ticket stubs even sometimes our bag tags. Of course travelers of decades ago were no different; in fact, they were worse. Sometimes we dig up vintage gems that deserve to be shared. All week, we'll look at a few lost pieces of ephemera that continue to inspire.
Water Aerobics. Mixology. A lecture on wildlife photography. Hairiest Chest Contest. These are just a few standard daily activities you'll likely find listed on the schedule of a modern cruise ship. However, it was back when passenger ships were called "liners" that schedules focused on the social, rather than the active and educational, advantages of the journey.
It's within this schedule for the old Cunard liner RMS Queen Elizabethher third day of a crossing from New York to Cherbourg/Southamptonthat we see this for sure. Where iPad classes would be listed on a 2011 cruise shop activity list, the 1949 version favors watching horse racing or listening to the news broadcast.
We especially love the note on the left regarding the creation of a band of talented passengers to perform a small concert. Any passengers bring along a violin and perhaps a bass? Nopedidn't think so.
[Photos: Jaunted]
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