词条 | Phoebe Snow (character) |
释义 |
Phoebe Snow was a fictional character created by Earnest Elmo Calkins to promote the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. The advertising campaign was one of the first to present a fictional character based on a live model amid impressionistic techniques. The advertising campaignRail travel around 1900 was tough on the clothing of passengers. After a long trip on a coal-powered train, travellers frequently would disembark covered with black soot, unless the locomotives were powered by anthracite, a clean-burning form of coal. The Lackawanna owned vast anthracite mines in Pennsylvania, and could legitimately claim that the clothes of their passengers would remain clean after a long trip. To promote this, the Calkins advertising department created, "Phoebe Snow", a young New York socialite, and a frequent passenger of the Lackawanna.[1][2] The advertising campaign presented Miss Snow as often traveling to Buffalo, New York and always wearing a white dress.[3]{{rp|9}} Calkins said he based the campaign on an earlier series of Lackawanna car cards (advertisements displayed inside coaches) - All in Lawn - created by DL&W advertising manager, Wendell P. Colton. They had been built on a rather limiting nursery rhyme, The House That Jack Built, and featured a nameless heroine dressed in white. For his new campaign, Calkins adopted a form of verse inspired by an onomatopoetic rhyme, Riding on the Rail, that he felt offered endless possibilities. The first advertisement featured the image of Phoebe and a short poem: Says Phoebe Snow about to go upon a trip to Buffalo "My gown stays white from morn till night Upon the Road of Anthracite" Phoebe soon became one of the most recognized advertising mascots in the United States, and she began to enjoy all the benefits offered by DL&W: gourmet food, courteous attendants, an observation deck, even onboard electric lights: Now Phoebe may by night or day enjoy her book upon the way Electric light dispels the night Upon the Road of Anthracite In 1903, filmmaker Edwin Porter parodied the advertising campaign with his short film A Romance of the Rails. "Phoebe Snow" was the only name Calkins ever used in the advertisements, and he laughed at later claims by Lackawanna officials that the name was selected only after lengthy scientific experimentation. The original artwork was painted by Henry Stacy Benton, who worked from a series of images of a model, Marion Murray Gorsch.[4] Later, she was photographed in a variety of railroad activities while dressed in a white gown. Standing in for the cool, violet-corsaged Phoebe character of the paintings, Gorsch was one of the first models to be used in advertising.[3]{{rp|9}} During World War I, anthracite was needed for the war effort and its use on railroads was prohibited, thus ending the career of Phoebe Snow. As she passed into legend, the Calkins heroine said farewell with the following jingle: Miss Phoebe's trip without a slip is almost o'er Her trunk and grip are right and tight without a slight "Good bye, old Road of Anthracite!"{{-}} Revival of the nameOn November 15, 1949, the Lackawanna Railroad inaugurated a new streamlined passenger train named after its long-dormant promotional symbol. The new Phoebe Snow represented the modernization of the Lackawanna passenger train fleet, and its image. The new train became Train No. 3 (westbound) and No. 6 (eastbound), which previously had been assigned to the railroad's formerly premier train, the Lackawanna Limited. The Phoebe Snow ran on a daylight schedule between Hoboken, N.J., and Buffalo, N.Y., a trip of 396 miles (639 km), in about eight hours.[5] The train was discontinued in 1966. Singer Phoebe Snow took her stage name from the character.[6] The 2014 oratorio Anthracite Fields commemorates the history of anthracite mining and, in its final movement, makes reference to the Phoebe Snow campaigns using original quotes. Notes1. ^{{cite journal| url=http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/asr/v007/7.2young.html |title=Project MUSE: Advertising and Society Review: On the Go with Phoebe Snow: Origins of an Advertising Icon |volume=7|issue=2|year=2006 |issn=1534-7311 |doi=10.1353/asr.2006.0029 |last=Young |first=Margaret }} 2. ^{{Harvnb|Watkins|1959|p=9}} 3. ^1 {{cite web |url=http://library.knox.edu/archives/manuscripts/calkins7.htm |title=Manuscript Collections: Earnest Elmo Calkins/Willis E. Terry Letters |accessdate=January 18, 2011}} 4. ^{{cite news |title=Phoebe Snow, Ad Model, Dies |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2202&dat=19670807&id=32UmAAAAIBAJ&sjid=bP8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=913,2087827 |accessdate=September 26, 2014 |work=Gettysburg Times |agency=AP |date=August 7, 1967}} 5. ^{{Harvnb|Taber|Taber|1980|pp=169–176}} 6. ^{{cite news|author=Kadden, Jack|title=On a Train Back To a Golden Age|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C00E4DF173EF933A25757C0A9639C8B63|quote=The other two are tavern-lounge cars built in 1949 for the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad's premiere train, the Phoebe Snow, which ran from Hoboken, N.J., to Buffalo. The name came from a character—dressed all in white—in an advertising campaign dating to the early 1900s, touting a train that ran on clean-burning anthracite coal. (The singer Phoebe Snow, born Phoebe Laub, took her stage name from the train.)|work=The New York Times|date=April 10, 2005|accessdate=April 27, 2011 }} References
Further reading
4 : Advertising characters|Coal|Coal in the United States|Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad |
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